Suddenly sea waste has become valuable as apparel companies are using it to create new products. Adidas for example, is selling shoes made mostly of plastic collected off the coast of the Maldives. A swimsuit line from Volcom is largely made from recycled nylon materials, including abandoned fishing nets.
Sportswear companies are putting ocean trash back to work – recovering, recycling, and repurposing materials for use in shoes, jerseys, and swimsuits. The ultimate ambition is to eliminate virgin plastic from their supply chain. Water bottles, grocery bags, and nylon fishing nets persist far longer than we can use them, and when they’re not properly recycled, they can end up killing marine life.
About 12 million tons of plastic trash end up in the world’s oceans every year. The up cycling-plastic practice is about taking action and implementing strategies that can end the cycle of plastic pollution for good. So the fact that Volcom’s swimsuits are made with recovered fishing nets creates a natural connection to surf culture, which fully understands the value of keeping the ocean clean.
Some 6,40,000 tons of fishing gear are lost or abandoned each year, leading to the deaths of an untold number of fish, sharks, sea turtles, dolphins, and other wildlife. One apparel company is recycling ten million pounds of fishing nets annually, mainly to make yarn for carpets.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- 5
- 6
- 7
- 8
- 9
- 10
The €11 bn deadlock, can Europe’s textile recycling catch up?
Europe is at a tipping point. Fast fashion consumption, led by rising incomes and a growing global middle class, has... Read more
From field to fiber, Bharat CottonNet is closing India’s cotton value gap
India’s cotton economy is entering a decisive phase of reform with the rollout of Bharat CottonNet 2026 along with the... Read more
US apparel imports drop 13.5% as Vietnam gains and China’s grip breaks
The US apparel sourcing market has entered 2026 with a sharp demand decline but an equally important shift in supplier... Read more
H&M finds growth below revenue line as margin discipline pays off
H&M Group’s latest quarter signals a decisive shift in global fast fashion: scale is no longer the primary reason for... Read more
As Europe cuts orders, India sees a rare export window post-FTA
The sharp dip in EU apparel imports is not, at first glance, the kind of headline exporters celebrate. January’s 15.48... Read more
The Death of the "Stockpile" Model: Inside the Digital Textile disrupt…
For decades, the global textile industry has been a game of high-stakes gambling: manufacture thousands of identical garments, ship them... Read more
Fuel crisis, rising costs the geopolitical shockwave hitting Indian textiles
The hum of textile machinery in Panipat has gone dead. Over 400 dyeing units have put their shutters, not because... Read more
Price wars, fast fashion, diamond money leads to Surat’s industrial shake-up
The sound of Surat’s diamond polishing wheels, once the city’s heartbeat, is fading. In its place, the relentless pulse of... Read more
India’s textile market nears Rs 15 lakh cr as domestic demand rewrites growth
India’s textile and apparel economy is no longer being driven merely by population growth or festive consumption cycles. It is... Read more
China Discounts, Bangladesh Bleeds: Inside Europe’s new apparel sourcing crisis
Europe’s fashion imports opened 2026 with a hard jolt. Fresh Eurostat-linked trade data for January shows the European Union’s apparel... Read more












