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Cotton Compostability: Turning Textile Waste into Value

20/11/2025 09:40 AM
Cotton helps make circular fashion a reality through its compostability.


Cotton Compostability: Turning Textile Waste into Value

Cotton is a remarkable textile. Grown from sun, soil and water, cotton is a drought tolerant crop with a small water footprint. Unlike synthetic fibers, cotton’s natural fibers do not shed microplastics. Cotton fibers biodegrade in water,1 wastewater2 and soil,3 returning to the earth as a part of its circular journey.

Cotton waste can be valuable, with its ability to be turned into bioenergy, biofuel, biochar and even sugar for bio-based materials. It can also be composted, further demonstrating cotton’s circular  lifecycle.

Composting is a sustainable solution for cotton at the end of its life, transforming scraps into nutrient-rich organic matter in less than 90 days.

What is Composting?

Composting is the process of converting organic matter into a nutrient-rich fertilizer. This is often done with organic materials like yard waste, plants or food waste. When it comes to textiles like cotton fabric or clothing, composting is defined more specifically. The Federal Trade Commission’s Green Guides, which provide guidance on environmental terminology and use, state that to claim a product as  compostable:
·         It should be clear whether the product can be composted at home or requires an industrial composting facility.


·         The product must fully degrade into organic materials within a similar timeframe to other compostable materials in the facility.
·         The resulting compost should be usable and free from inorganic or toxic materials. Composting Fabric: Studies

Show How Textiles Break Down in Soil

Compostable fabrics, therefore, must be made of biodegradable, natural materials that do not produce microplastics or release toxins. As a natural fiber, cotton has the ability to meet these criteria.

In a study from Cornell University in 2010, cotton and polyester were compared for biodegradability in both lab and industrial composting environments. Cotton fabric samples experienced significant biodegradation, with up to 77% weight loss within 90 days, while the polyester samples showed minimal degradation.3

Research around composting cotton is ongoing. In a 2023 study conducted by Cornell University, denim jeans (made of both cotton and synthetic materials) were buried in a compost pile. The cotton began to biodegrade within a month, and within 5 months, only the synthetic material remained.4

Why is Cotton Composting Important to the Textile Industry?

Textile waste accounts for nearly 6% of municipal waste in the U.S., much of which includes non-biodegradable synthetic materials. To combat the waste and pollution often associated with the textile industry, circular, end-of-life solutions are needed. The studies above confirm that cotton can return to the earth, showcasing its potential, with the appropriate infrastructure, as a truly circular textile.

Do Consumers Care About Cotton Composting?

Globally, 86% of consumers are concerned about sustainability.5 According to Cotton Incorporated’s Global Sustainability Survey, 58% of consumers consider sustainability in their apparel buying decisions. This shift in consumer purchasing habits towards sustainability is evident, with an increasing preference for sustainable products.

Consumers recognize compostability as a crucial aspect of sustainability. In the packaging industry, consumers rate compostability and plant-based packaging as the most sustainable option. Although composting textiles isn’t standard practice yet, consumers increasingly associate material compostability with sustainability, influencing their buying decisions.

Cotton offers many sustainability benefits for manufacturers looking to meet the expectations of their consumers. Pursuing cotton compostability can increase cotton’s reputation as a sustainable material for a variety of products.

What are the Environmental Benefits of Cotton Composting?

Composting can play an important role in making the textile industry more sustainable. It offers many benefits, including reducing textile waste, recovering useful materials, reducing greenhouse gas emissions, enriching soil health5, and contributing to a circular economy.

Does Composting Cotton Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions?

In 2018, 11.3 million tons of textiles ended up in U.S. landfills. There is a pressing need to reclaim these materials. Even if a complete shift to natural materials were feasible (which is unlikely in the near future), it wouldn’t resolve the issue of textiles filling up landfills. The problem goes beyond resource inefficiency; it’s about what happens when materials are discarded from the value chain and buried in landfills.

Biodegradable waste such as food scraps, yard waste and paper, makes up over half of the municipal waste that enters landfills in America. However, being biodegradable doesn’t guarantee, or even suggest, natural decomposition in landfills. Landfills lack oxygen, leading to anaerobic decomposition. This releases greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide and methane into the atmosphere. This methane emission is significant, with landfills contributing 14% of global methane emissions. Methane is 84 times more potent than carbon dioxide over a 20-year period, making its mitigation crucial for meeting short- term climate targets.

The promising studies above show that diverting cotton from landfills can help reduce methane emissions. Composting cotton achieves the opposite effect by storing methane in the soil instead of releasing it into the atmosphere. Furthermore, it also helps to reduce greenhouse gasses because the improved nutrient profile enriches the soil.6

 


For more information, please visit Cottonworks.com (Source: Cotton Incorporated)

 

Page References

1 Zambrano, M. C., Pawlak, J. J., Daystar, J., Ankeny, M., Goller, C. C., Venditti, R. A., &

(2020). Aerobic biodegradation in freshwater and marine environments of textile microfibers generated in clothes laundering: Effects of cellulose and  polyester-based

microfibers on the microbiome. Marine Pollution Bulletin, 151. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.marpolbul.2019.110826

2 Smith, M. M., Zambrano, M., Ankeny, M., Daystar, J., Pires, S., Pawlak, J., & Venditti, R. A.

(2024). Aquatic aerobic biodegradation of commonly flushed materials in aerobic wastewater treatment plant solids, seawater, and lakewater. BioResources, 19(1), 1150- 1164.     http://doi.org/10.15376/biores.19.1.1150-1164

3 Li, L., Frey, M., & Browning, K. J. (2010). Biodegradability Study on Cotton and Polyester

Fabrics. Journal of Engineered Fibers and Fabrics, 5(4). https://doi.org/10.1177/155892501000500406

4  Schwarz, M., Alwala, W., Perju, A., Bonhotal, J., Frey, M., Pires, S., Ankeny, M., & Daystar, J.

(2024). The Effect of Denim Fabric as a Feedstock in Large Scale Composting of Manure/Bedding and Food Scraps. Compost Science & Utilization, 31 (1-2), 61-73. https://doi.org/10.1080/1065657X.2024.2349081

5  Cotton Incorporated and Cotton Council International. (2017). Sustainability:  Concerned

Customers. Cotton Incorporated Lifecycle Monitor. https://www.multivu.com/players/English/7972231-cotton-incorporated-global- sustainability-environment-survey/docs/SustainabilityConc_1512674738005- 1565005957.pdf

6 Ho, T. T. K., Tra, V. T., Le, T. H., Nguyen, N. K. Q., Tran, C. S., Nguyen, P. T., Vo, T. D. H., Thai,

V. N., & Bui, X. T. (2022). Compost to improve sustainable soil cultivation and crop productivity. Case Studies in Chemical and Environmental Engineering, 6. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cscee.2022.100211

 

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