Carbon footprint calculation and evaluation of mulberry silk quilts

Author:

Liu Can1,Li Xin1,Li Qizheng23ORCID,Chen Yuyi4,Liu Jinggang5,Liu Shuangshuang3,Wang Laili678ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Fashion Design & Engineering, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China

2. International Institute of Silk, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China

3. International Silk Union, China

4. Suzhou Foreign Language School, China

5. Guangxi Guihua Silk Company Limited, China

6. Digital Intelligence Style and Creative Design Research Center, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China

7. Silk and Fashion Culture Research Center of Zhejiang Province, Zhejiang Sci-Tech University, China

8. Zhejiang Provincial Innovation Center of Advanced Textile Technology, China

Abstract

At present, there is growing concern with climate change and environmental impacts arising from textiles. The carbon footprint measures the total amount of greenhouse gas emissions generated directly and indirectly by human activities. Among silk home textiles, mulberry silk quilts occupy a significant proportion, but there has been no carbon footprint accounting for silk quilt products. In order to identify the key emission processes during the production of mulberry silk quilts and further explore the improvement opportunities, this study calculated and evaluated the carbon footprints of mulberry silk quilts with nine specifications. The results showed that the carbon footprint result was influenced by product weight and size. The larger the size and weight of the product, the larger the carbon footprint result would be. By examining the carbon footprint of a representative piece of mulberry silk quilt (1 kg, 180 cm × 220 cm) throughout the production process, the study found that the carbon footprint result was concentrated in the white silk yarn production stage, exceeding 44.87%. Further, steam was the largest emission source of the carbon footprint, at over 39.56%. In addition, this study compared and analyzed the differences between fresh and dry cocoon reeling technologies. In terms of carbon footprint, the dry cocoon reeling technology produces a larger carbon footprint than the fresh cocoon reeling technology for the same weight of white silk. The findings in this study provide valuable insights into the greenhouse effect impact of mulberry silk quilt production and contribute to sustainable manufacturing practices in the silk industry.

Funder

the Zhejiang Provincial General Scientific Research Projects Fund of China

Chinese Academy of Engineering

Hangzhou Philosophy and Social Science Planning Project

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference39 articles.

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2. UNFCCC. UN helps fashion industry shift to low carbon. United Nations: United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 2018, https://unfccc.int/news/un-helps-fashion-industry-shift-to-low-carbon. (2018, accessed 10 July 2023).

3. Ellen Mac Arthur Foundation. Fashion and the circular economy 2017, https://archive.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/explore/fashion-and-the-circular-economy. (2017, accessed 10 July 2023).

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