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Cotton

Home » Magazine » Good, issue 9 » Cotton

Cotton is one of the most chemical-intensive crops in the world. It covers 2.5% of the world’s cultivated land yet uses 16% of the world’s insecticides

Photo from www.flickr.com/photos/rwklose/ / CC BY 2.0

  1. Cotton is one of the most chemical-intensive crops in the world. It covers 2.5% of the world’s cultivated land yet uses 16% of the world’s insecticides.
  2. Seven common pesticides used in cotton cultivation are recognised carcinogens. WHO estimates that one million people are poisoned and 22,000 die each year as a result of sprays used on non-organic cotton.
  3. It takes about 100 grams of chemicals to produce enough cotton to make one t-shirt.
  4. Worldwide production of organic cotton is growing at a rate of more than 50 percent per year.
  5. Cotton production involves about 100 million households in 70 countries.
  6. The conventional cotton industry relies on forced child labour. As many as one million children work in Egyptian cotton fields. In Andhra Pradesh, India, over 100,000 children work 13 hours a day for less than $1.
  7. The world price of cotton has been declining for several decades. Huge US and EU farm subsidies encourage overproduction, lower prices and undercut millions of poor farmers around the world.
  8. The WTO has ruled that US cotton subsidies harm Brazilian cotton farmers. The US now faces annual trade sanctions of about US$295 million.
  9. Eliminating US cotton subsidies would increase the income of West African farmers by 5–12%, enough to cover the healthcare and schooling costs of up to ten people for a year, or feed two children for a year.
  10. Buying fair trade cotton helps farmers cover the costs of sustainable production, and allows investment in schools, roads and healthcare facilities.

Comments

Hannah Shone
 
Mon February 15, 2010 @ 07:36 AM
In New Zealand you can buy organic and Fairtrade cotton from only a handful of retailers.
Fairtrade licensees for cotton are:
For adults clothing:
http://www.kowtow.co.nz
http://www.micahclothing.co.nz
For babies and children:
http://www.earthlings.co.nz

It's important to remember that if the garment doesn't have the fairtrade logo, it hasn't been audited regularly by an independent body.

Buying fairtrade guarantees a better future for cotton farmers in the developing world.
Last Edit: February 15, 2010 @ 09:31AM by Annabel McAleer 
Violet
 
Fri January 14, 2011 @ 04:15 AM
What about fabric sources for home sewers? I try to sew  most of my own clothes and can't afford to buy ready made fairtrade or organic cotton garments.
Phillipa
 
Fri January 14, 2011 @ 09:30 AM
Home sewers. If fairtrade or organic cotton isnt in your price range, try up-sourcing fabrics from secondhand clothes shops . Better than supporting the demand for new fabrics.

Liz S
 
Fri January 14, 2011 @ 09:45 PM
Thanks Hannah! Southland's Micah Clothing is great - I've just ordered a $20 Fair Trade Tshirt with this wonderful slogan 'WARNING: Economics textbooks not safe for use on real planets with ecological limits'. I've also recently discovered low-impact bamboo clothing online in NZ through NZ Nature Company http://news.nznature.co.nz/forms/13-01-11/NZ.htm Bamboo looks like cotton but feels wonderful to wear, produced more sustainably than cotton, and is highly absorbant of carbon emissions as it grows. NZ Nature Company came from Nelson's Maruia Society (now Ecologic Foundation) protecting forests in the 1970s. Enjoy! Liz :)
Nancy Hill
 
Sun January 23, 2011 @ 12:24 PM
Excellent article! cheers, nancy (toronto)

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