Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France

Global warming represents a major subject on all society levels including governments, economic actors and citizens. The textile industry is often considered a polluting activity. In this project, French textile manufacturers sought to quantify the carbon footprint (CF) of sold clothes and household...

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Main Author: Jérôme Payet
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2422
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spelling doaj-e5ac9870bf5944afb23293c5deb8ba402021-02-25T00:00:28ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502021-02-01132422242210.3390/su13052422Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in FranceJérôme Payet0CYCLECO, 18 avenue Roger Salengro, 01500 Ambérieu en Bugey, FranceGlobal warming represents a major subject on all society levels including governments, economic actors and citizens. The textile industry is often considered a polluting activity. In this project, French textile manufacturers sought to quantify the carbon footprint (CF) of sold clothes and household linen using Life Cycle Assessment in France for the purpose of reducing it to meet the constraints of Paris Agreement by 2050. First, manufacturers calculated the carbon footprint of 17 clothes and household linen products and established alternative scenarios for four production routes. Secondly, they modeled the supply of the upstream sector through different countries. Based on imports of textile products, their calculated CF for one French person reaches 442 kg of CO<sub>2</sub>eq/year. Means of action to reduce this carbon footprint by a factor of 6 (74 kg of CO<sub>2</sub>eq/person/year for textiles) are calculated and are the following: installing the most energy-intensive production processes in a country with a low carbon electricity mix, avoiding unsold goods, implementing eco-design approaches and enhancing the value of end-of-life products with reuse or recycling. Therefore, CF for textiles per capita is reduced to 43 kg CO<sub>2</sub>eq/year which goes beyond the objectives of Paris Agreement and facilitates carbon neutrality in the textile sector. The first priority for reducing the French carbon footprint of clothes and household linen would be to locate textile production in countries with (i) low carbon electricity, (ii) to reduce unsold items, and (iii) to elaborate ecodesign of product including circular economy.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2422textilesclothesapparelhousehold linencarbon footprintcircular economy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jérôme Payet
spellingShingle Jérôme Payet
Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
Sustainability
textiles
clothes
apparel
household linen
carbon footprint
circular economy
author_facet Jérôme Payet
author_sort Jérôme Payet
title Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
title_short Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
title_full Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
title_fullStr Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Carbon Footprint for the Textile Sector in France
title_sort assessment of carbon footprint for the textile sector in france
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2021-02-01
description Global warming represents a major subject on all society levels including governments, economic actors and citizens. The textile industry is often considered a polluting activity. In this project, French textile manufacturers sought to quantify the carbon footprint (CF) of sold clothes and household linen using Life Cycle Assessment in France for the purpose of reducing it to meet the constraints of Paris Agreement by 2050. First, manufacturers calculated the carbon footprint of 17 clothes and household linen products and established alternative scenarios for four production routes. Secondly, they modeled the supply of the upstream sector through different countries. Based on imports of textile products, their calculated CF for one French person reaches 442 kg of CO<sub>2</sub>eq/year. Means of action to reduce this carbon footprint by a factor of 6 (74 kg of CO<sub>2</sub>eq/person/year for textiles) are calculated and are the following: installing the most energy-intensive production processes in a country with a low carbon electricity mix, avoiding unsold goods, implementing eco-design approaches and enhancing the value of end-of-life products with reuse or recycling. Therefore, CF for textiles per capita is reduced to 43 kg CO<sub>2</sub>eq/year which goes beyond the objectives of Paris Agreement and facilitates carbon neutrality in the textile sector. The first priority for reducing the French carbon footprint of clothes and household linen would be to locate textile production in countries with (i) low carbon electricity, (ii) to reduce unsold items, and (iii) to elaborate ecodesign of product including circular economy.
topic textiles
clothes
apparel
household linen
carbon footprint
circular economy
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/5/2422
work_keys_str_mv AT jeromepayet assessmentofcarbonfootprintforthetextilesectorinfrance
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