Study reveals natural fibers persist in UK lake sediments

A new research paper challenges the assumption that natural fibers biodegrade quickly, finding cotton dominating 150-year-old sediments in Rudyard Lake, Staffordshire, UK. Co-authored by Carry Somers of Fashion Revolution, the iScience study urges the fashion industry to base sustainability claims on science. It highlights ongoing debates between natural and synthetic fiber impacts.

Researchers examining sediments from Rudyard Lake in Staffordshire, UK—a site historically fed by textile mills—discovered that natural fibers, particularly cotton comprising over 70% of the 150-year fiber record, outnumbered synthetics even after polyester appeared in 1979. The paper, published in iScience and co-authored by Fashion Revolution co-founder Carry Somers, academic, and citizen scientists, questions fashion's reliance on natural fibers as biodegradable alternatives to synthetics, which hold 69% of the global fiber market and contribute 35% of ocean microplastics per IUCN estimates. Majority fibers in global seawater samples are also natural, persisting in environments like low-oxygen lake beds, penguin habitats in South Georgia, and UK rivers. This challenges assumptions amid campaigns promoting natural materials over plastic-shedding synthetics found ubiquitously from soils to sea spray. Somers stated, “We have to get away from this extreme that if plastics are bad, natural [fibers] must be good.” Dr. Thomas Stanton, a co-author, noted that in low-oxygen conditions, natural fibers can persist over ecologically meaningful timescales, though not denying eventual biodegradation. Deirdre McKay, another co-author, remarked, “Fashion is participating in a giant, uncontrolled experiment with ecology.” The study critiques the Product Environmental Footprint (PEF) methodology, which deems synthetics lower-impact than cotton in water use, land, pesticides, and durability—a view contested by over 900 signatories representing 500,000 farmers in 2024 and a 2026 Bremen Cotton Exchange paper. An EU Green Claims Directive aims to curb greenwashing but may favor synthetics, per critics. Brands like Anya Hindmarch and Pangaia test materials for biodegradability under ISO standards, emphasizing product-level verification over visual fragmentation tests. Asha Singhal highlighted that biodegradation depends on ecosystem factors like microbes and moisture.

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Flinders University team reports nano-cage adsorbent that captures short-chain PFAS in water tests

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Researchers at Flinders University say they have developed an adsorbent material that removed more than 98% of short- and long-chain PFAS—including hard-to-capture short-chain variants—in laboratory flow-through tests using model tap water. The approach embeds nano-sized molecular cages into mesoporous silica and, in the experiments reported, could be regenerated while remaining effective over at least five reuse cycles.

In Sri Lanka's Monaragala district, UK firm Mygroup and Fibershed Sri Lanka are expanding a regenerative cotton initiative to help debt-trapped farmers. The Exiled project fuses ancient Chena practices with modern techniques, yielding its first crop and launching a new clothing brand this week. Farmers report hopes for stable prices and healthier soil amid climate challenges.

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Athletes from 16 countries will wear uniforms made from recycled fabric at the World Cup in June. Nike says the outfits come from its first elite performance apparel produced entirely from textile waste using advanced chemical recycling. The move highlights both progress and limits in efforts to make fashion more sustainable.

The Circularity Gap Report 2024 reveals that the global economy's circularity has declined to 7.2 percent, down from 9.1 percent in 2018. This means less than 8 percent of consumed materials like steel, plastic, and food come from recycled or reused sources. The report, published by Circle Economy with Deloitte, highlights the persistence of the linear take-make-dispose model amid rising sustainability discussions.

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