The grant provided by Walmart Foundation, which is the charitable arm of U.S. supermarket chain Walmart, aims to help local Goodwill organizations acquire the necessary skills, systems, and infrastructure to transform textile waste. There are 25 local organisations that will use the fund to learn how to produce post-consumer textile feedstock that aligns with recyclers’ stringent specifications. Staff members will also be educated and trained on the sorting and feedstock preparation process.

The project says it will receive leadership from local organisations such as Goodwill Industries of Tenneva Area, Goodwill of the Finger Lakes, Goodwill Industries of Ontario Great Lakes, and Goodwill Industries of West Michigan. Goodwill Industries International director of sustainability Brittany Dickinson expressed the organisation’s dedication to scalable, circular, and traceable textile solutions: “We see textile-to-textile recycling as a key pathway for donations that are unwearable and at their end of life. Establishing regional Goodwill collaborations for textile circularity supports our role as a critical player in the circular economy and aligns with our organisational sustainability strategy.”

The local Goodwill organizations are also modelling and testing regional textille collaboration hubs. It is hoped these hubs will be replicated across the extensive Goodwill member network, offering a blueprint for other social enterprises seeking to enhance textile circularity.

To read the full story, visit https://www.just-style.com/news/walmart-foundation-funds-us-recycling-hubs-for-unsellable-textile-waste/#.
Author: Isatou Ndure, Just Style
Photo by Marques Thomas on Unsplash

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