Christmas sweaters are adding to plastic pollution, the environmental charity says

Sharing is caring!

Most Christmas sweaters are made of plastic and are probably going to add to plastic contamination on the planet’s seas, environmental philanthropy has cautioned.

Uproar, a UK philanthropy, found that 95% of the 108 sweaters it dissected – taken from 11 high-road and online retailers – were completely or incompletely produced using plastic materials.

Acrylic was the most widely recognized plastic fiber found in these festive sweaters – with 44% made altogether from the material and 75% containing acrylic somewhat.

A 2016 study by Plymouth University in the UK uncovered that acrylic releases just about 730,000 microfibers in every wash, far more than polyester or polyester-cotton mixes.

Given the high utilization of acrylic, Hubbub cautions that an average Christmas sweater is “likely to add to the issue of plastic pollution in our oceans.”

The philanthropy estimates that clients in the UK will purchase 12 million Christmas sweaters this festive season – in spite of previously owning 65 million – and that two in five of these garments will be worn only once over the holiday time frame.

Sarah Divall, project co-ordinator at Hubbub, stated: “Fast fashion is a major threat to the natural world and Christmas jumpers are particularly problematic as so many contain plastic.”

Divall included that sweaters ought to be “for life, not just for Christmas.”

To handle the environmental issue, the philanthropy suggests that individuals swap their sweaters with companions or purchase second-hand.

The warning comes in front of the philanthropy Save the Children’s yearly Christmas Jumper Day on December 13, when individuals in the UK are urged to put on their festive wear and give to philanthropy.

Gemma Sherrington, executive director of marketing and fundraising at Save the Children UK, disclosed to CNN that the philanthropy has been “working hard” to guarantee the yearly occasion happens “without exacerbating the enormous climate problems” the world faces.

Sherrington included that Save the Children wants to make the current year’s occasion “the most sustainable” and has urged officers and schools to hold sweater swaps.

Disclaimer: The views, suggestions, and opinions expressed here are the sole responsibility of the experts. No Opinion Bulletin journalist was involved in the writing and production of this article.