Home Nordic news Denmark/EU funding more environment friendly jeans production

Denmark/EU funding more environment friendly jeans production

Model and UNEP Goodwill Ambassador Amber Valetta toured Tunisian denim factories to see sustainable manufacturing practices in action. (Justin Jin/UNEP)
Model and UNEP Goodwill Ambassador Amber Valetta toured Tunisian denim factories to see sustainable manufacturing practices in action. (Justin Jin/UNEP)

 Few garments are as universal as a pair of jeans. Since 1873 when copper rivets were added to denim worker pants to strengthen the pockets, a design patented by businessman Levi Strauss, blue jeans have crossed borders, classes and generations. From farms to festivals to high-fashion runways, jeans are everywhere.

Despite their often-humble look, jeans are the product of an intricate global value chain. Behind each garment is a planet-spanning web of natural resource extraction, manufacturing and transport, not to mention product design and marketing.

Denim is one of the garment industry’s most-resource-intensive products. A single pair of jeans can require 3,800 litres of water to produce. (Justin Jin/UNEP)
Denim is one of the garment industry’s most-resource-intensive products. A single pair of jeans can require 3,800 litres of water to produce. (Justin Jin/UNEP)

Danish/EU Funded programme

UNEP’s InTex programme is helping manufacturers to find more environment friendly production methods. Funded by the European Union and the Government of Denmark, and part of the UNEP Textile Initiative. InTex works with small and medium-sized enterprises in textile-producing countries to support their sustainability and circularity. The initiative helps factories collect and analyze operational data to better understand where environmental impacts are occurring most and what practical interventions can create the most measurable improvements.

Wastewater treatment plants at factories  ensure the majority of water used in finishing processes is recycled bacj into the factory. (Justin Jin/UNEP) 

Wastewater treatment plants at factories ensure the majority of water used in finishing processes is recycled bacj into the factory. (Justin Jin/UNEP) 

Fashion pollutes

Fashion and textiles is among the world’s most polluting industries. It also stokes climate change and consumes huge amounts of natural resources. And denim is one of the industry’s most resource-intensive products. A single pair of jeans can require 3,800 litres of water to produce. Many jeans also need large quantities of energy and chemicals to achieve certain colors and special effects.

The challenge is to find processes that achieve the same quality without creating problems for the environment or for the person who will wear the garment.

While much of the world’s denim is produced and manufactured in Asia, Tunisia is among the top suppliers of finished denim garments to the European Union (EU), holding about 8 percent of the market share last year. The North African nation’s proximity to Europe allows quick-turnaround times, which helps brands respond to the market and stay atop trends.

Digital product passports, soon to be required by the European Union, will disclose where a garment comes from, what it contains and whether it can be recycled. (Justin Jin/UNEP)
Digital product passports, soon to be required by the European Union, will disclose where a garment comes from, what it contains and whether it can be recycled. (Justin Jin/UNEP)

Demand for sustainable products

“Brands, customers, final consumers and even governments are demanding sustainable products with low impact,” said Bilel Ben Miled, Sustainability Manager at Gonser Group near Tunis.

This pressure is often a chain-reaction: governments mandate environmental requirements from brands, and brands then push their suppliers to meet those standards, lest they switch to manufacturers that can.

At Gonser Denim Revolution (GDR), sustainability has increased over time through a series of improvements. Chemicals are being phased out in favour of safer alternatives that can deliver similar results with less environmental impact.

While consumers can play a role in that by demanding more sustainable denim, governments and industry must lead the charge towards sustainability, say experts. (Justin Jin/UNEP)
While consumers can play a role in that by demanding more sustainable denim, governments and industry must lead the charge towards sustainability, say experts. (Justin Jin/UNEP)

Amount of water reduced

Critically, water used to wash the jeans at various points in the production process is treated and recycled. This and other technological improvements can help reduce the amount of water used in a single pair of jeans by 75 per cent, Ben Miled said. That is especially important in a country prone to extended droughts.

Meanwhile, another manufacturer, DEMCO, has also started using machinery that washes jeans with ozone gas or minimal amounts of ozonized water to bleach or fade denim. It reduces about 90 percent of the water used, said Johnny De Miersman, the company’s founder and CEO.

The challenge is to find processes that achieve the same quality “without creating problems for the environment or for the person who will wear the garment,” De Miersman explained.

For Ben Miled, InTex-supported life-cycle assessments helped turn sustainability from a broad ambition into an action plan. “With this, we know where we can improve the environmental impact, where we can reduce our footprint,” he said.

Model and UNEP Goodwill Ambassador Amber Valetta toured Tunisian denim factories to see sustainable manufacturing practices in action. (Justin Jin/UNEP)
Jean makers in Tunisia are cutting down on the chemicals they use during manufacturing amid new standards set by the European Union, a key export market. (Justin Jin/UNEP)

EU rules

The European Union is advancing new rules that will come into effect in 2027 and 2028, including eco-design requirements and digital product passports, which document the sustainability of materials used in garment manufacturing. Ultimately, this promotes transparency, showing consumers what it is they’re really buying.

“The digital product passport is pushing us to document everything about a garment, from the fibre, the composition, the wash, even traceability about recycling and everything that comes after,” explained Alison De Miersman, DEMCO’s creative director.

While consumers can play a role in that by demanding more sustainable denim, governments and industry must lead the charge, said Claudia Giacovelli, who heads UNEP’s InTex programme.

“Governments must set clear rules for sustainability,” she said. “Brands must design with sustainability and circularity in mind, while supporting suppliers as they transition away from harmful environmental practices. And manufacturers must continue investing in cleaner technologies and smarter production processes.”

Mind-blowing complexity

Model and UNEP Goodwill Ambassador Amber Valetta recently toured Tunisian denim factories to see sustainable manufacturing practices in action for a UNEP produced documentary.

“The complexity of what it takes to make one pair of jeans is mind-blowing,” said Amber Valletta. “There are hundreds of hands that go into making one pair of jeans and a lot of different processes. It’s incredible. It travelled all over the world just to get to you and your closet.”