Your wardrobe is filled with plastic. Your sweat-wicking workout clothes, your running shoe uppers, your raincoat, your high-performance hiking gear, your office clothing. Check the labels. All of it probably has at least some polyester in it. Actually, that label is polyester, too.
Yes, in case you didn’t know (and the majority of people don’t, apparently?) polyester is a type of plastic made from fossil fuels. It’s the same plastic—polyethylene terephthalate, or PET—that is in plastic water bottles that have the number 1 in the chasing arrow on the bottom. But while water bottles can be recycled, it’s almost impossible to recycle polyester.
Let’s be fair. It’s true, in this case, that plastics have made it possible—to run faster, to hike longer, and to carry everything you need for an overnight mountaineering trip right on your own back. Lightweight and high performance, polyester represents both the heights of human achievement, and also, because it is so cheap and easy to make, our seemingly infinite capacity for destruction and waste.
Traditionally, there were natural limits to how much clothing we could manufacture: there was only so much land, water, people, and animals available to make materials like cotton, linen, leather, and silk.
There are scarcely any limits, however, on making virgin polyester from petroleum. Crude oil is refined into the petrochemical ingredients like terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol. Those monomers are transformed by a chemical company into PET plastic. That is then formed into little pellets and shipped to a polyester mill, where the pellets are melted back down to be formed into fiber.
As a result of this push-button process, fiber production has exploded, doubling in the past 20 years while the world’s population has grown by only 25 percent. Today, half of the fiber used in fashion is polyester, a material that didn’t exist 100 years ago.
Synthetic fibers now account for 1.35 percent of global oil production, according to a 2021 report by Changing Markets Foundation. More visibly, our tons of waste polyester and blended fabrics are ending up as trash all over the world. Witness the Atacama Desert in Chile being taken over by an invasive species of Global North clothing “donations.”
Synthetic fibers also shed off our clothing when we wear them and wash them—you might have heard we ingest up to a credit card’s worth of plastic every week, and much of that is polyester fibers. Researchers are still exploring how this might be affecting our health, but given the fact that the hormone-disrupting chemical BPA has been found in polyester socks and sports bras, it can’t be good.
Large brands, ever mindful of all the bad press around polyester, have responded by going in hard on recycled polyester. Just one example of many: In honor of Earth Day this year, Adidas announced that 96 percent of the polyester it uses is recycled. For an athletic brand like Adidas, that’s a big achievement. But this announcement was more … measured.