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Waldmensch70
4 years ago

What we think doesn’t matter.

If you want to make an estimate yourself as part of your homework, think about it yourself.

Cotton is grown in a country (e.g. USA). Then she goes to a company that prepares cotton, then to the spinning mill that produces the threads from it. Then to a fabric manufacturer that weaves the fabric from the threads. The fabric then goes to a dyeing process which dyes it accordingly. Then to a clothing company that produces clothes from the fabric. Then the trousers are packaged and transported to the next distribution center (port), shipped from there to the other end of the world, reloaded there and transported to the store, which she literally hangs into her sales rooms.

If you think that many of these places are in different places in the world (different continents), then the pants have gone around the world in the end. You can now think and compile the KM yourself.

Neutro123
4 years ago
Reply to  Waldmensch70

Must not have been HA

Can also be of its own interest

Or it is also possible to provide information about such a question by adding the solution about a week later

(There are questions about which the opinion of others is really not important, such as “What pleases my friend”)

verreisterNutzer
4 years ago

depends on where it is made

Either in China, India Pakistan or the USA (the cotton fields)

GreymoorDLC
4 years ago

It is produced by globalization throughout the world not only at one place

verreisterNutzer
4 years ago
Reply to  GreymoorDLC

I mean there are most made

verreisterNutzer
4 years ago

On most jeans or other garments stand “Made in China, India, Pakistan, Vietnam, Bangladesh,…

GreymoorDLC
4 years ago

chazzy13
4 years ago

Hello.

Here is an answer in the following link.

At the shop table, the jeans have already travelled more than 50,000 km and have a very negative impact on our global ecosystem:

https://www.umweltbildung.at/cms/praxisdb/files/342_phdat_1.pdf

VG chazzy13(-):

CanadianRanger
4 years ago

Include the cultivation of cotton / indigo with one and every processing step of weaving, tailoring, dyeing, etc. – then 30,000 km.

Oops – not so bad. It’s 50,000 km!

https://www.umweltbildung.at/cms/praxisdb/files/342_phdat_1.pdf

Vogtlandrapper
4 years ago

Jeans are mainly produced in low-cost countries. They’ve got a number of kilometers behind them in your wardrobe. Above all, it depends on where you travel when you wear the jeans.

ExZorroHD
4 years ago

Depends on which jeans I would say, many well-known designer labels produce in their own country (Chanel/Dior)

Eredoss
4 years ago

2 km. More can’t be

chazzy13
4 years ago
Reply to  Eredoss

From the store to you home, maybe.

themarchtag94
4 years ago

Depends on how far you drive to work every day

Fairy21
4 years ago

Ecosia: Jeans Production Way

Ecosia/Pictures: Jeans Production Way

Ecosia/Videos: Jeans Production Way

MuckiHD
4 years ago

100k because I think

CanadianRanger
4 years ago
Reply to  MuckiHD

50,000 km

GreymoorDLC
4 years ago

20 thousand

CanadianRanger
4 years ago
Reply to  GreymoorDLC

Even 50,000, you can google.

GreymoorDLC
4 years ago
Reply to  CanadianRanger

have been estimated