Bamboo Textiles

organically grown bedlinen

tenbro Oeko certificate

Bamboo bedlinen. soft, absorbent and blended with 30% cotton, Mother Natures gift. Organically grown bamboo is the most sustainable fibre available Made into bamboo duvet covers, bamboo fitted sheets and pillowcases.

our picture shows the Oekotek certificate held by our fibre producers

Bamboo textile products Environmental Evaluation

 This is a very complex and expensive programme of evaluation which as a very small company we cannot afford to do ourselves. However, we have the ability to compare to some degree and growing bamboo has many advantages over cotton (which we also use in virtually all of our products)

There is no universally accepted definition of sustainable textiles.

The closed loop method of production, enables use recovery and reproduction.(Braungart 2006)

Growing bamboo absorbs huge amounts of CO2

Bamboo-     Produces approx 35% more oxygen than an equivalent stand (area) of trees (Knight 2007)

Yields 50 times as much fibre per acre than cotton

Is not derived from oil or coal like polyester and nylon

Needs no water irrigation

Needs no pesticides - cotton cultivation apparently uses 15% of all pesticides produced

Needs no insecticides - cotton cultivation  uses 25% of all insecticides produced

Grows at the rate of approx 100cms per day

Accepts dyes well thereby using less dyestuff

 

The criteria for sustainable textiles asks questions but we cannot gather precise figures for provenance.

Is it safe for human and animal health?

Is the material biobased or recycled?

Is it produced in an energy efficient way?

Are the producers and manufacturers socially responsible?

At the end of its useful life does is it biodegradable , is it recycleable?

The answer to all these questions is yes .

 

I hope that this has gone some way to explaining why we at Bamboo Textiles Ltd are proud to be involved in the production of bamboo textile products here in the UK. In itself producing things needs human resources and our staff are paid a lot more than the minimum wage. We employ people now and hope the company generates more jobs in the future. We also produce much of our own electricity having installed a 14.5kw array of photovoltaic panels on our roof last year. Our private vehicles run on LPG and we minimise journeys in private cars. We recycle all our waste of which we generate less than ave 5kgs per week anyway.

 

Now lets look at the disadvantages of producing viscose fibre

In production chemicals are indeed used to break down the pulp into a spinnable form, these chemicals (alkalis and highly diluted acids) are not simply used once in a production batch. Although they do have a finite life and they have to be replenished. The fact that they are used up in the processing means that there is limited final toxicity.

Viscose of bamboo is better than viscose of wood (Rayon)because of the relatively easy breakdown of bamboo which is a grass and bamboo is soft in the middle.

 

12th June 2013, 15:41
 

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