"Bangladesh producing eco-friendly jeans"
Bangladesh has 67 garments factories already that have the Leadership
in Energy and Environment Design (LEED) certificates and around 220
garments factories are in the pipeline to get the LEED certificates
soon. The information was revealed to The Independent by the founder of
Denimsandjeans, Sandeep Agarwal.
LEED provides green building certificates worldwide. This shows that
keeping environmental sustainability in mind, Bangladesh is building
more Eco-friendly factories.
Agarwal was speaking to The Independent at the seventh edition of
‘Denim sand jeans Bangladesh’, an exposition of jeans products, which
concluded in Dhaka on Thursday.
Asked about the importance of green factories, Agarwal replied that
making the factories Eco-friendly has become more important worldwide
because the planet is turning out to be more vulnerable for its
inhabitants by the day.
Bangladesh earns around EUR 1.3 billion every year by exporting denim
jeans and stands number one in the European market. This shows the
massive opportunities that lie in building more green factories that
will produce denim jeans in a sustainable, environment-friendly and
productive manner, he added.
A Spanish company, Jeanologia, which has participated in the
Denim sand jeans expo, specialists in the development of sustainable
technologies for garments. The company presented its new ‘e-flow
technology’.
This correspondent asked the project manager of Jeanologia, Fabien
Liautard, about the working pattern of ‘e-flow technology’. He replied
that the traditional method is to wash functional denim fabrics in
water. E-flow technology uses air and has basically two different parts:
laser and eco.
“e-flow technology gets the air from the atmosphere and transforms it
into nano-bubbles. These bubbles consume minimum proportions of water
and functional elements that are not harmful for the environment,”
Liautard said.
The marketing officer of Jeanologia, Kazi Nahidul Alam, said that by
using e-flow technology, an exact amount of chemicals are used on denim
jeans and none of it is wasted. So, there is no chance of emitting
excess chemicals that are harmful to the environment.
He explained that the traditional method needs 1,800 liters of water
to wash 100 kg of denim garments, while the e-flow method uses only 30 liters of water to wash 100 kg of denim jeans.
He also added that e-flow technology saves 1,770 litres of water
compared to the traditional method. It is entirely sustainable and
environment-friendly for the product.
Envoy Textiles Ltd is a renowned denim jeans manufacturer in Bangladesh. It has got the Platinum award from LEED.
Envoy marketing manager Asif Wares Khan told this correspondent that
Envoy uses a water treatment plant to wash the denim fabrics. “It is a
modern technology. It recycles water and is not hazardous for the
environment,” he said.
Product sustainability is the prime concern for any manufacturing
industry, especially readymade garments, because it emphasises
environmental, social and economic benefits without harming the
environment. It gets product benefits too.
The event manager and cofounder of Denim sand jeans Bangladesh,
Rubaiyat Ahsan, said that natural dyes derived from plants,
invertebrates or minerals are being used to dye denim fabrics in
Bangladesh for quite some time.
“This discharges less emission and is not harmful for the environment at all,” Ahsan added.
Rubaiyat also told The Independent that in the near future, the export
market of denim jeans would exceed the market of the woven fabric
because the price of woven products is not increasing as compared with
denim fabrics or jeans.
Garment factories like Ha-Meem Group, Shasha Denims Ltd, and Envoy
Group produce top-quality denim jeans in Bangladesh and export these,
said Ahsan.
According to Denim sand jeans officials, Bangladesh is the second
largest jeans exporter in the world after China. Currently, 29 renowned
mills are producing denim jeans in Bangladesh.
Around 28 companies from Bangladesh, Turkey, India, China, Germany,
Spain, Brazil, Pakistan, Hong Kong, among others, participated in the
expo to showcase their denims, fabrics and latest accessories.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Thank you for your comment