• Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    New rules will also ensure products are more enviromentally friendly and that goods are also more easily repaired and recycled.

    This seems more like the real news here. Keeping clothes lasting longer would be to everyone’s benefit.

    • IamSparticles@lemmy.zip
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      10 months ago

      Seriously. One of my pet peeves is shoes made with no outsole. Around 10 or 12 years ago a bunch of shoe brands decided they could save money if they stopped making shoes with a hard rubber outsole. Instead they just mold the tread into the soft midsole material. They spent a bunch of money convincing people it was fashionable. Probably a lot cheaper to produce for them. But the shoes wear out insanely fast.

      • Zippy@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I have never worn out a pair of shoes that way. Not against what you suggest but if they takes say 20 percent more energy but only 5 percent of people will take any advantage of it, that is a fifteen percent hit to the environment.

        I just took those numbers out of my ass but there is a good chance that if you force companies to build say a product like this more durable, it could end up costing the consumer and the environment more than less. It is near impossible to legislate.

  • AutoTL;DR@lemmings.worldB
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    10 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Negotiators from the European Parliament and EU member states on Tuesday reached an agreement to stop large retail groups of destroying unsold clothes and footwear.

    Brussels is seeking to address textile consumption in Europe, which has the fourth highest impact on the environment and climate change after food, housing and transport.

    The latest agreement comes as part of a wider initiative after the European Commission proposed changes to the bloc’s so-called ecodesign rules.

    MEP Alessandra Moretti, who spearheaded the legislation through parliament, said: “It is time to end the model of ‘take, make, dispose’ that is so harmful to our planet, our health and our economy.”

    Full details of requirements for individual products have not yet been finalized with parliament and member states still needing to officially approve the agreement, although that this is believed to be a formality.

    The agreement outlined that the European Commission can issue legally binding requirements to make goods such as furniture, tyres, detergents, paints and chemicals more environmentally friendly.


    The original article contains 326 words, the summary contains 162 words. Saved 50%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • Leela [it/its] @lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    for every anti-tech monopoly law the EU makes, the counterbalance is a law favoring the fast fashion industry. I suppose that instead of destroying them, they’d need to be sold in a second hand clothes store or to be refurbished, and not just dumped into Africa or China… right?

  • mtchristo@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Keep dumping your problems to Africa to deal with them. While keeping a hypocritical ecological front

    • knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml
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      10 months ago

      Not surprising, the EU is at its core an imperialist project.

      The negative effects of EU regulations on the global south as well as its own internal periphery aren’t discussed enough.

  • FigMcLargeHuge@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    They might as well try banning fashion and individual choice. Just because you ban destroying clothing if it doesn’t sell doesn’t mean that people will automatically wear it. Just walk into any resale shop/goodwill store and see the amount of clothes there that are practically given away and people are still picky about it. “MEP Alessandra Moretti, who spearheaded the legislation through parliament, said: "It is time to end the model of ‘take, make, dispose’ that is so harmful to our planet, our health and our economy.” " Well I don’t know about her, but I have a simple set of shirts, pants, socks and underwear that I have just been rotating through for years (yes I wash them). Sounds like they need to work on the stigma of wearing clothes more than once…

    • ninjan@lemmy.mildgrim.com
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      10 months ago

      Much better if they’re simply given away as charity as the end stop instead of literally sent into the incinerator to try and extract a fraction of the energy that went into making it. At least that way people who literally can’t afford clothes get to wear something new, clean and whole.

    • Krause [he/him]@lemmygrad.ml
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      10 months ago

      They might as well try banning fashion and individual choice.

      good

      you don’t need 30 different brands of white shirts or 100 different brands of the same fucking chocolate cookie