How an Australia-first Facility Is Tackling South-east’s Fashion Waste
The Sydney Morning Herald
ENRICHED
Details
- Date Published
- 18 Apr 2026
- Priority Score
- 1
- Australian
- Yes
- Created
- 18 Apr 2026, 04:00 am
Description
Second-hand clothing stores seem to be on every corner, but a new local facility is aiming to solve the issue of textile waste, with the help of AI.
Summary
This article highlights an Australian-first textile recycling facility in Ipswich that utilizes specialized artificial intelligence to sort garments by fabric composition and color. The technology automates the removal of hardware and preparation of textiles for repurposing into recycled yarn and industrial materials. While it demonstrates an application of AI for environmental sustainability and reducing risks of modern slavery in offshore supply chains, it does not address frontier AI capabilities or catastrophic AI risks. The focus remains on narrow AI implementation within the circular economy rather than broader AI safety or governance frameworks.
Body
AdvertisementFrom clothing markets to vintage stores, the options for buying second-hand clothes seem to be everywhere. But what happens when the abundance of pre-loved items overtakes demand?“We have a one in, one out rule,” explains Hannah Klose, who is behind the popular Instagram account @nevereverpayretail.Hannah Klose runs popular thrifting social media account Never Ever Pay Retail.To avoid overconsumption, Klose and her family donate an item of clothing to local op shops for every item they purchase second-hand.Across Australia, the Salvos are seeing an influx of donations, with some stores experiencing a five-week turnover, according to business development manager Meriel Chamberlin.AdvertisementThis is the same turnover as major fast fashion brands such as H&M.“[Shoppers should] go regularly [to op shops]. That’s the only way we can handle the volume,” Chamberlin says.But with donations often overtaking purchases, what happens to the clothes that don’t sell? Do they end up in landfill?A new Australian-first textile recycling facility, opened by Salvos Stores at their Ipswich factory, is working to address this issue.AdvertisementChamberlin took this masthead on a tour of the Carole Park facility, where garments are assessed by world-first artificial intelligence technology and transformed into textile squares.The automated process removes buttons and zippers and sorts the fabric based on composition or colour.Salvos Stores head of business development Meriel Chamberlin has experience as a textile engineer.Neesha SinnyaThe resulting squares are then used to produce recycled yarn, insulation, sound-proofing panels and plastic products.Anything deemed unsuitable for sale – old work uniforms, for example – is processed by the machine and repurposed.AdvertisementItems are first sorted by humans, who decide whether they are suitable for recycling.Neesha SinnyaChamberlin says the volume of fast fashion being donated to second-hand stores has increased.“More and more [donations] are not high quality because of fast fashion,” she says. “So how do we best optimise our resources but also get the good stuff that is sellable out?”Artificial intelligence technology then sorts the garments based on either fabric composition or colour.Neesha SinnyaThe mammoth operation, backed by $4.9 million from the Queensland government, was developed to ensure that landfill was never an option.AdvertisementEach year, according to the state government, 200,000 tonnes of clothing are sent to Australian landfills. The Ipswich facility can process 5000 tonnes of textiles a year.Chamberlin says the technology also reduces the risk of offshore human exploitation by processing the clothes into squares before delivery.Once items are sorted based on composition or colour, they are fed through a conveyor belt that creates textile squares.Neesha Sinnya“If the [full garments] go offshore, the modern slavery risk is really high and hard to manage,” she says.“We know we’ve taken out that massive first stage of human exploitation risk by serving them in this condition instead of the whole garment.”AdvertisementBut the recycling plant is just one south-east initiative aiming to cut down on textile waste and promote sustainability.In Brisbane, the founders of the weekly Love Me Again markets have also noticed an increase in donations.Co-founder Isobel Dear says they’ve seen a “100 per cent uplift on sellers over shoppers”, with the market spaces selling out a month in advance across multiple locations.Lana Sciasci (left) and Isobel Dear have set high standards for their Love Me Again second-hand markets.AdvertisementIn a bid to promote higher-quality garments, the markets have strict requirements on what sellers can bring.“We don’t allow ultra-fast fashion brands like Boohoo, Temu or Shein. We know what those brands are doing, they’re making fashion overconsumption, so ethically, we don’t allow them for that reason, but we also notice they just don’t sell [at the market],” Dear says.Start the day with a summary of the day’s most important and interesting stories, analysis and insights. Sign up for our Morning Edition newsletter.SaveYou have reached your maximum number of saved items.Remove items from your saved list to add more.ShareLicense this articleMore:Sustainable fashionCity lifePollutionEthical livingFor subscribersNeesha Sinnya is a social media journalist for Brisbane Times.AdvertisementAdvertisement