Eco-Friendly Fabrics & Sustainability
The fashion industry produces 10% of global carbon emissions — more than aviation and shipping combined. Your clothing choices matter.
The Scale of the Problem
92M
Tons of textile waste per year globally
200+
Years for polyester to decompose
700K
Microfibers released per wash load
20%
Of global water pollution from textile dyeing
Most clothing ends up in landfills within 3 years. Synthetic fabrics don't decompose — they break into microplastics that enter soil, water, and eventually our food chain.
Biodegradable vs Non-Biodegradable
Biodegradable
Will naturally decompose in months to years
- Cotton1-5 months
- Linen2 weeks
- Hemp2-3 months
- Wool3-5 months
- Silk1-4 years
- Bamboo1-3 years
- Lyocell/TencelMonths
Non-Biodegradable
Persists in the environment for decades to centuries
- Polyester200+ years
- Nylon30-40 years
- Acrylic200+ years
- Spandex/ElastaneUnknown
- Polypropylene20-30 years
These materials break into microplastics — they never truly disappear, they just get smaller.
Sustainability Rankings
Organic Cotton, Linen, Hemp, Lyocell/Tencel, Recycled Wool
Low water use, biodegradable, minimal chemical processing. Organic farming avoids pesticides.
Conventional Cotton, Wool, Silk, Bamboo, Modal
Biodegradable but resource-intensive. Cotton uses lots of water; wool requires land; silk involves silkworms.
Recycled Polyester, Recycled Nylon (Econyl), Viscose/Rayon
Recycled synthetics reduce virgin plastic but still shed microfibers. Viscose can involve deforestation.
Polyester, Nylon, Acrylic, Spandex, PVC
Made from petroleum. Not biodegradable. Sheds microplastics. Energy-intensive production. Will persist in environment for centuries.
Spotting Greenwashing
Brands love vague eco claims. Here's what to watch for:
"Made with recycled materials"
Could be 5% recycled, 95% virgin polyester. Check the actual composition percentage.
"Sustainable collection"
Often a tiny fraction of the brand's output. The rest of their line may be 100% polyester fast fashion.
"Eco-conscious" / "Earth-friendly"
These terms have no legal definition. Always check the fabric composition label for the actual materials.
What to look for instead
Specific certifications: GOTS (organic), OEKO-TEX (no harmful chemicals), Bluesign (safe production), GRS (verified recycled content).
What You Can Do
Check the label before buying
Use FabricIQ to analyze the composition. A 2-second scan tells you if a garment is biodegradable, how it'll hold up, and how to care for it.
Choose natural over synthetic when possible
Cotton, linen, wool, and hemp are biodegradable and renewable. They're not perfect (cotton uses water), but they don't persist in the environment for centuries.
Buy fewer, better items
One $60 cotton shirt that lasts 5 years is more sustainable than five $12 polyester shirts that last 6 months each.
Wash cold, wash less
Cold water reduces microfiber shedding by up to 30%. Washing less frequently also extends garment life. Spot-clean when you can.
Use a microfiber filter
A Guppyfriend bag or Cora Ball catches microplastics during washing — preventing them from entering waterways.
Donate or recycle, don't trash
Even worn-out clothes can be recycled into insulation or rags. Textile recycling keeps fabrics out of landfills.
See How Your Clothes Stack Up
Search materials by eco-friendliness or analyze your clothing tags.