Regenerating clothes into compost

There is simply no precedent for the volume of clothes in the world today so we are experimenting with ways to keep material resources in local circulation through soil after its initial purpose is served. Soil is our biggest carbon sink and the source of all fresh food and natural fibre, so it truly has superpowers worthy of enriching.

The composting process cycles four of life’s building blocks – carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen – back into the soil so that it can support new growth. The clothing fibres need to be moistened to encourage and speed the decomposition process. The fibre becomes food for microbes, bacteria, fungi, moulds, worms, beetles, snails, mites, cockroaches and other critters, which are all part of the process.

By all accounts, when food and clothing go to landfill they emit the greenhouse gas methane which contributes to climate change. We can compost food waste in our backyards and neighbourhoods, so why not our clothing waste? Of course clothing with wearable life can be donated to charities but composting is a solution for cloth that has exhausted other purposes.

I cannot find a textbook that discusses composting clothes to regenerate as organic matter but I did find this online reference.  Industrial clothing recycling solutions may arise, but in the meantime composting provides a local solution.

In 2018, I did a backyard experiment and found most of the natural-fibre material swatches (wool, cotton, linen) disintegrated into ‘soil’ within the year while synthetic fibres remained inert. This is because fibres like polyester, nylon, acrylic are plastic, derived from fossil fuels the same as plastic bags, containers and bottles.

This year, we did another experiment with six garments (all started of similar size/volume) made from different fabric types being buried for three months in a compost bin at Bulimba Creek Catchment Sustainability Centre at Carindale in Brisbane.

Jane Milburn and Bulimba Creek Catchment Sustainability Centre nursery manager Leigh Weakley bury clothes in late May, left, and dig up in late August 2019.

Five of the garments were natural fibres (wool, cotton, linen, silk, viscose-blend) the sixth was lycra (not expected to breakdown). Most of the thread used to sew garments is polyester (synthetic) so it is not likely to breakdown. Buttons were reclaimed before burial.

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Composting clothes into nutrients

There is simply no precedent for the volume of clothes in society today and we need to experiment with other ways of keeping material in circulation locally. When you’ve exhausted options for swapping/reselling clothes or donating them to charities, recycling in your backyard is a valid option. When something is biodegradable, it is capable of decomposing into raw materials and cycling back through the ecosystem without pollution. All natural-fibre clothing is in this category and therefore biodegradable, although the time taken will vary.

Composting your natural-fibre clothing works in exactly the same way as putting vegetable scraps and spoilt food into the compost. They decompose and becomes food for new plants. The composting process cycles four of life’s building blocks – carbon, oxygen, hydrogen and nitrogen – back into the soil so that it can support new growth. The clothing fibres need to be moistened to encourage and speed the decomposition process. The fibre becomes food for microbes, bacteria, fungi, moulds, worms, beetles, snails, mites, cockroaches and other critters, which are all part of the process.

I confirmed this in my backyard science experiment when I buried synthetic and natural fibre swatches in my garden during 2018. Almost all the natural fibres decayed while the synthetic remained untouched. Synthetics are derived from petroleum, do not absorb water, and are effectively plastic. In May 2019, we set up a compost experiment at Bulimba Creek Catchment Sustainability Centre at Carindale with which we will revisit at the end of August.

Jane Milburn and nursery manager Leigh Weakley at Bulimba Creek Catchment Sustainability Centre.

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