Sunday, March 18, 2018
https://dailyasianage.com/news/113010/appropriate-and-economic-use-of-jhut
Appropriate and economic use of jhut M S Siddiqui
Jhut as commonly known is waste fabric from woven and knit garments. These jhuts are either or mixed of cotton, yarn and fabrics. These jhuts are raw materials of spinning mills for re-production of yarns and there after production of home textile and tarry towel. The colored jhut also included waste from tailoring shop and different small fashion garment factories. More than 25 percent of materials are discarded in fabric and garment factories, which can go up to 47 percent in some cases. Bangladesh government use to give bond license to garment factories for import of fabrics. Government use to allow different quantity of wastage out of imported fabrics to different garment factories. In practical situation, the major part of fabric waste come out from the process of the cutting of fabric following certain design and pattern of the market and some of the waste generate at the production stages. One study shows that cutting process counts for 16.36 percent of waste from the total material intake. While a factory bought 272.4 m2 of textile to produce the 100 t-shirts, and 44.57 m2 of that material ended up as cutting waste. About 6.37 percent of waste was left over from sewing (14.71 m2 from the 227.83 m2 of cut fabric sent to sewing) and 0.09 percent from quality control. These calculations also depend on the product type (e.g. t-shirt, jacket), size of the given product (e.g. XL, S) and efficiency of cutting master and workers. The quantity of leftovers per annum is immense. According to an estimated optimistic scenario, the world would create 40 billion square meters of leftover textile per year, almost enough to cover the entire republic of Estonia with waste. According to the mean prediction, the leftovers would amount to 80 billion square meters, and according the pessimist scenario the waste would cover North Korea and its 120 billion square meters.