Indian textiles factories are part of project Swar to cut chemical use

Many textiles factories in India have started participating in a project called Sustainable Water Resources (Swar) to improve resource efficiency, cut chemical use in 2014 by 402 tonnes, according to the Stockholm International Water Institute (Siwi).

The company said that it considers a reduction in the use of chemicals, in addition to the substitution of harmful substances, a key part of chemical management. The company added that this is particularly true for the textiles industry because if not properly treated wastewater leads to the depletion of oxygen in receiving water bodies. A reduction in water consumption also leads to a reduction in used chemicals.

More than 40 factories in Delhi and Jaipur participated in the project, which involved providing technical consultations to factories to help them improve their chemical efficiency related to washing, dyeing, printing and water treatment.

The project lead and Siwi programme manager, Rami Abdelrahman said that this achievement is largely related to the choice of chemicals, the dosing of these chemicals, getting the colours/dying right the first time and reducing the number of re-dyes.

In the past two years, 13,000 factory workers and managers have been trained. Mr Abdelrahman said that the focus of the training is to understand good chemical management practices, particularly around the choice of materials, storage and handling, and awareness of international programmes to phase out hazardous chemicals.

More than half of the participating factories will continue to work on their own, continuously communicating their development to their clients in Sweden. Others have joined a network created by Siwi and the three fashion brands to continue education.

Mr Abdelrahman said that the factories continuing on their own realize that they now have enough competence and capacity to drive efficiency improvements. The remaining factories see a value in continuing with others, by sharing experiences, and getting support from experts assigned to the network.

The project will expand to China, Turkey, Bangladesh and Ethiopia, and will include several more Indian states.

The project involves Siwi, Swedish retail brands Indiska, KappAhl and Lindex, their Indian suppliers, the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) and India-based consultant cKinetics.

Recent Posts

Re-START Alliance to strengthen textile recycling in India

Re-START Alliance, a textile recovery alliance, has launched Cluster Collective, its first flagship initiative aimed at increasing textile-to-textile recycling in…

2 hours ago

SuperCircle to expand AI-based waste management platform

SuperCircle, a New York-based technology platform focused on textile waste management, has raised US $24 million in Series A funding.

2 hours ago

India establishes agro-textile demonstration farm for technical textiles

India has set up a demonstration farm in Gujarat to showcase the use of agro-textiles, especially protective nets. The project…

2 hours ago

Stora Enso develops packaging foam using wood-based fibers

Stora Enso, Krekelberg Flock Products and Flocktechniek have developed Papira, a plastic-free packaging foam made from cellulose-based flock fibers.

1 day ago

Texfil, Decathlon India to promote recycled polyester in sportswear

Texfil Private Ltd, a subsidiary of Filatex India Ltd, has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with Indeca Sporting Goods Pvt.…

1 day ago

New partnership shows successful mixed-fiber garments recycling

A partnership between Radici InNova, The Lycra Company, and lingerie brand Triumph addresses the challenge faced when recycling clothing made…

1 day ago