INSIDER Spring 2019 | Page 3

Insider Environment How much Cola are your jeans worth? In every corner of our consumer driven soci- ety, the planet suffers… Water consumption is- n’t something we fre- quently worry our- selves about, especial- ly in places such as the fashion industry where thousands of gallons of water are used just to make a single pair of jeans! It came as a massive shock to me when I found out how much water is used in the process of creating clothing, and how that water could be given to those who need it the most. Many jeans are made from cotton and the process of growing this cotton to make into denim uses approximately 1,800 gallons of water as said by Treehug- ger.com, that’s roughly around 6814 litre bot- tles of coke worth of water! For only enough cotton to make ONE pair of jeans! Now, when you take into ac- count the entire pro- cess of making one pair of jeans, making the cotton and the dy- ing process, it takes 9,982 gallons of water- approximately 45,379 litre bottles of coke! as well as the overall global textile produc- tion, with 1.3 trillion gallons being used yearly for fabric dy- ing. Even one cotton t shirt takes 715 gal- lons of water to make - that’s nearly three years’ worth of drink- ing water! Something needs to change, and fast. We can’t all be in con- trol of everything that happens in these in- dustries, but by shop- How large the cotton fields can become ping in more eco- friendly places we can help begin to change Do you enjoy wearing Levi’s jeans? What the world for the bet- about the 501® edition? Well, these jeans ter. alone take up to 3,781 gallons of water to make just one pair, pulled straight from their website. Levis are currently looking into different ways to manufacture cotton, even using recycled cotton, Levis stating that jeans made of 15% recycled cotton will save will save all that water, all those thousands of gallons, used during the re- cycling process. One in ten people around the world do not have access to clean drinking water, six out of ten people around the world do not have access to proper functioning toilets. The things we take for granted. After oil and paper, the fashion industry is the third biggest consumers of water consumption around the globe, with 25 billion gallons of water being used yearly for growing cotton The College magazine online: sixthformmag.blogspot.co.uk