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Kenya's second-hand clothing traders lobby versus EU export restrictions

A proposition by France, Denmark and Sweden to restrict usedclothing exports from the European Union might injure the clothes resale market in Kenya, which employs 2 million Kenyans, an agent of secondhand clothes sellers stated.

The EU exported 1.4 million tonnes of utilized textiles in 2022, more than two times as much as in 2000 according to U.N. trade information. Exports to establishing countries can cause contamination when clothing that can not be resold end up in dumps, the EU has said.

The 3 countries are proposing that the EU apply the Basel Convention to utilized clothing, banning exports of dangerous fabric waste and requiring prior notified grant be obtained before importing textile waste.

The export of textile waste from the EU to developing countries triggers significant ecological, social, and health problems. The EU has to put an end to this practice, Denmark's. deputy irreversible representative to the EU, Soren Jacobsen, told. an Environment Council conference in Brussels on Monday.

The aim of consisting of used clothes in the Basel Convention. would be to lower or even end exports of utilized clothes from the. EU, and instead to promote the advancement of textile recycling. within the bloc, Cyril Piquemal, France's deputy irreversible. agent to the EU, said.

However Teresia Wairimu Njenga, chair of the Mitumba Consortium. Association of Kenya, which represents sellers of second-hand. clothing, informed imports of used clothing supported. livelihoods and produced tax earnings for the nation.

Njenga rejected that the imports consist of large quantities of. unusable products that end up in garbage dump.

No one is providing us garbage by force-- what we are purchasing is. excellent quality clothing, and if a provider wishes to sell us garbage,. we would more than happy to decline their consignment, she said.

Kenya imported 177,386 tonnes of used clothes in 2022, a. 76% increase on the quantity imported in 2013, according to U.N. trade information. African countries consisting of Ghana, Senegal, and. South Africa are likewise substantial importers of utilized clothes,. the data programs.

Around 1% -2% of each imported bale of utilized clothes ends up. as waste, according to research study commissioned by the association. and released in September in 2015, based upon 120 interviews. with importers of pre-owned clothes in Nairobi.

Njenga has satisfied authorities in Lithuania, Finland, and Sweden,. to refute the proposition, and plans to satisfy authorities from. the European Commission's Directorate-General for Trade and the. Directorate-General for the Environment.

(source: Reuters)