What will we be wearing in the year 2100? By looking at predictions for the future and what technology they are developing now, the likely apparel that we will all be sporting can be estimated. Put bluntly, it is immediately clear that Global Warming is the primary worry for the year 2100. From the moment you get up in the morning, grab your lowfat milk out the fridge to pour over your favourite cereal, or switching the kettle on to make your morning coffee - we are all responsible. Electricity, as we
all very well know, is made from burning fossil fuels at a rapid rate, releasing gases, such as Carbon Dioxide and Nitrogen Dioxide, into our atmosphere. This, in turn, attributes to the gases released by natural occurrences - from volcanic eruptions to gassing field cows. Over time it all adds up; the atmosphere thickens and traps more of the sun’s heat, slowly warming the planet like an oversized knitted tea cosy. The apparel and textile industry accounts for 10% of the worlds Carbon Footprint. Due to the
processes involved in the apparel life cycle, (the extraction of raw materials, creating the item, the frequent washing and drying of the apparel and the disposal) creating a single item of clothing requires a lot of energy. Because of this realisation, we are currently trying to adapt the very materials that our clothes are made from so that they are more efficient and environmentally friendly. Sustainability and efficiency is therefore a definite aspect of future fashions, particularly if we want to reduce the effects of climate change.
What will we be wearing in the year 2100? It is a question that intrigues many, and a difficult one to answer depending on our culture, location and situation. Will we all be living on Mars? Will it be ‘the norm’ to float on down to the corner shop wearing our very own spacesuits, bought from the local high street stores – the more wealthy sporting Prada spacesuits and showing off their newly bought Gucci oxygen tanks, proudly strapped to their backs? Will we be living in a nuclear war zone, doomed to wearing only protective lead jumpsuits with all faces unrecognisable behind our clumpy gasmasks? Will we be living in a high-tech era where
the latest electronics are stitched into our clothing? A world where LED lit dresses are the latest craze and we all sport the latest upgrade of computer glasses?
10% of our current Global emissons come from the textiles industry.
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