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The smiths
15/09/2022

The smiths

Check this out! 🌎Other photo are in the comments sectionMangatarem pangasinan for pick upShipping via jnt
08/09/2022

Check this out! 🌎
Other photo are in the comments section

Mangatarem pangasinan for pick up
Shipping via jnt

Grunge grunge grunge
01/09/2022

Grunge grunge grunge

August 21, 1991.

That was nothing.
30/08/2022

That was nothing.

Winners!

That was an amazing performance 🔥!!!


Drop later humans! 🌍🌎🌏Like my page! Like my page! Like my page!Save the earth
27/08/2022

Drop later humans! 🌍🌎🌏

Like my page! Like my page! Like my page!
Save the earth

Ever wondered where your clothes end up?The world's driest desert has become a dumping ground for global fast fashion, a...
20/08/2022

Ever wondered where your clothes end up?

The world's driest desert has become a dumping ground for global fast fashion, and its mountains of discarded clothes are growing even bigger.⁣

Photos show mass piles of sweaters, boots and other thrown away clothing in Chile’s Atacama desert, which is increasingly suffering from pollution created by the fashion industry.⁣
⁣⁣
Around 59,000 tons of clothing arrive every year at Chile’s Iquique port, which is typically made in China or Bangladesh. It then passes through Europe, Asia or the US before making landfall in Chile. From there, the clothing is resold around Latin America. ⁣

Despite this, only a fraction of the clothes that end up in Chile are bought locally. At least 39,000 tons of it cannot be sold and ends up in landfills in the surrounding desert area of Iquique port, AFP reports. ⁣

Clothing created with synthetic materials or treated with chemicals can take 200 years to biodegrade and is as toxic as discarded tires or plastics. ⁣

Back in 2019, the UN found that the fashion industry was responsible for 8 to 10 percent of the world’s carbon emissions. To put it in context, that’s more than all international flights and maritime shipping combined. ⁣

To make a single pair of jeans requires 7,500 litres of water.⁣

The fashion industry generates around 20 percent of the world’s wastewater and releases half a million tons of synthetic microfibers into the ocean annually.⁣

“But now, people are starting to question themselves.”⁣

Read More: http://bit.ly/3febzRb

📷 Martin Bernetti / AFP via Getty.

Words by:

17/08/2022

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