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Technically Speaking




 RECYCLE AND



 RECYCLE



 SOME MORE



                                                           th
                                                     64  Annual


                                 NCH Hospital Ball
 by Dave Trecker


 ecycling clothes is next.     Benefiting NCH Healthcare System Orthopedics
 R      And that’s something new.
 We know about the problems with plastics. We fi ll our
 Plastics and textiles have one thing in common. Both are
 grocery carts with them every week, and they end up in landfi lls or,   Please mark your calendar for
 polymers made up of chemicals.  As such, there are similar ways to
 worse, polluting the oceans, some 12 million metric tons every year.
 deal with them when discarded.
 To address the problem, the United Nations is marshaling a   Saturday, November 5, 2022
 Cotton-rich garments can be shredded, slurried and their pulp
 worldwide eff ort to recycle single-use plastics, and many polymer
 either extruded and spun into yarn or dried and cut into sheets.
 manufacturers and food companies are pitching in to help.  The Ritz-Carlton, Naples
 Polyester clothing and even plastic bottles can be similarly
 Th  at all makes sense. Recycling plastics we understand. But
 shredded and the contaminants removed. Th  e polyester can then
 clothes? Why recycle clothes?
 be depolymerized, purifi ed and depolymerized, melted and spun
 Th  e answer is, like plastic waste, textiles have a huge   Honorary Chairs
 into fi ber.
 environmental footprint. Th  e European Commission says the
 If that sounds expensive, it is. Most reconstituted garments sell
 average consumer throws away 24 pounds of textiles a year.   Reinhold & Erika Schmieding
 at a premium these days, attracting mostly the save-the-planet
 Multiply that by millions of consumers.
 crowd. Since the recycle process is scale dependent, higher-volume
 Some 73% of textile waste is dumped in landfi lls or incinerated,
 manufacture should bring down costs and broaden the market.  Cocktails & Dinner • Live Auction
 according to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, which estimates
 A better bet may be to start with textiles that are sustainable to
 that by 2030 the disposed material will total 134 million metric   Fund-A-Need • Music & Dancing
 begin with. Rayon is one of those. A cellulosic that can be made
 tons.
 from wood chips, rayon waste can be recycled by purifying with
 Chemical & Engineering News says that translates to 1.2 billion
 urea to make a carbamate that’s easily converted into a fi ber, itself
 tons of carbon dioxide a year, more than the emissions from all   Physician & Nurses of the Year Recognition
 recyclable.
 international fl ights and maritime shipping combined.
 Lest this sound pie-in-the-sky, textile reuse is attracting
 Not surprisingly, the fashion world is a big contributor to the
 capital from around the world. Start-ups are emerging in Finland,   Since the first Hospital Ball in 1958, philanthropic support
 problem. Because fashion styles change every year, many clothes-
 Sweden, Chile, Italy and clothing retailers like Benetton, H&M
 conscious people – my daughter among them – change their   from our community has had a transformational effect on the
 and Marks & Spencer are providing consumer outlets. Th  e
 wardrobes and eventually dispose of the dresses and slacks that are   quality of healthcare provided; from a small 50-bed hospital to a
 opportunity is there. Less than 0.5% of textile waste is currently
 out of style.
 being recycled.         nationally recognized 716-bed, two-hospital healthcare system.
 Disposal isn’t even necessary. Simply washing the clothes
 Advertisements are starting to appear. My wife just clipped ads
 triggers waste. Th  e journal Environmental Pollution reports, “Th  e
 for reconstituted shirts, sneakers and Levi’s.
 number of microfi bers released from a typical 5 kg wash load
 It’s not a movement, at least not yet. But it may soon be.
 of polyester fabrics is over 6 million depending on the type of   Ad Graciously Sponsored by:
 Th  e appeal is undeniable. Green garments. Clothes from trees.
 detergent used.” Some 35% of micropolymers entering the ocean
 Textiles from trash. All recycled.              Life In Naples Magazine
 are from synthetic textiles, mostly polyesters.
 Dr. Trecker is a chemist and retired Pfi zer executive living in Naples.
                                     For sponsorships and ticket information
                                    (239) 624-2019 • nchmd.org/hospitalball
 70  Life in Naples | August, September, October 2022  Life in Naples |  August, September, October 2022                                                     71
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