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Life cycle assessment applications to reuse, recycling and circular practices for textiles: A review.

Authors :
Abagnato, Samuele
Rigamonti, Lucia
Grosso, Mario
Source :
Waste Management. Jun2024, Vol. 182, p74-90. 17p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

• Review of life cycle assessment papers on textile waste management and practices. • In integrated textile waste management systems, reuse should be prioritised. • Longer service life and good use phase practices give lower environmental impacts. • Many variables influence the impact assessment of textiles reuse and recycling. • Data about people attitude towards textiles circularity could support LCA studies. To understand which are the best strategies for textile waste management and to analyse the effects on the environment of applying circular economy practices to textile products, a review of 45 publications where life cycle assessment (LCA) is applied to these topics has been carried out. The separate collection of textiles, followed by reuse and recycling brings relevant environmental benefits, with impacts related to reuse resulting lower than those of recycling. At the opposite, when mixed municipal solid waste is addressed to energy recovery, the textile fraction is the second most impacting on climate change, right after plastics, while for landfill disposal impacts textiles directly follow the more biodegradable fractions. Textiles manufacturing using recycled fibres generally gives lower impacts than using virgin ones, with a few exceptions in some impact categories for cotton and polyester. The circular practices with the lowest impacts are those that ensure the extension of the textiles service life. Another aim of this review is to identify the main variables affecting the life cycle impact assessment (LCIA). These resulted to be the yield and material demand of recycling processes, the use phase variables, the assumptions on virgin production replaced by reuse or recycling, the substitution factor in reuse, and transportation data in business models based on sharing. Thus, in LCA modelling, great attention should be paid to these variables. Future research should address these aspects, to acquire more relevant data, based on industrial-scale processes and on people habits towards the circular economy strategies applied to textiles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0956053X
Volume :
182
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Waste Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
177110153
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2024.04.016