In Bengaluru a growing textile-waste recycling model is empowering former waste-pickers to run collection centres, ensuring clothes are properly separated, sent for recovery, and either recycled, downcycled or resold. This silent movement blends circular-economy principles with social upliftment — transforming waste into opportunity and dignity.
In the leafy lanes of south Bengaluru, a quiet but powerful shift is underway — transforming discarded clothes into fresh opportunities for livelihood and sustainability. What began as modest waste-picking is blossoming into a structured circular-economy movement, putting the city’s informal recyclers at the center of a textile-waste revival.
At a dry-waste collection centre (DWCC) in JP Nagar, “Kumudha Ma,” a former waste-picker, sifts through bundles of old clothes, separating them from other trash. Each bundle is sent to a textile recovery facility on the city’s outskirts, where items are sorted for resale, recycling or downcycling. What’s remarkable: DWCCs may be municipal infrastructure, but many are managed by former waste-pickers or self-help groups — effectively turning post-consumer waste into income for marginalized workers.
This model isn’t just about moving trash — it’s about building dignity, agency and economic resilience. Below are the key highlights of this emerging recycling movement:
Reclaim-and-Reskill: Ex–waste-pickers like Kumudha are now waste entrepreneurs, running collection centres and ensuring segregation of textiles before disposal. This formalises their role and transforms livelihood.
Segregation Matters: Residents are being urged to separate textile waste from other dry waste. Cleaner separation ensures recyclable clothes stay uncontaminated — otherwise even a stray milk-packet in a bundle could ruin the cloth’s recycling potential.
Circular-fashion Potential: Collected garments travel to recovery facilities, where they are sorted and directed for resale, recycling or downcycling. Thus old clothes avoid landfills, and new material or garments get a second life.
Social impact at Heart: By anchoring the initiative around informal waste-pickers and self-help groups, the model ensures that those most affected by waste mismanagement become central to the solution — elevating their social and economic status.
Business-plus-Sustainability: What started as a grassroots effort is shaping up as a viable business model merging environmental sustainability with economic opportunity — offering a replicable template for other Indian cities.
This quiet recycling revolution in Bengaluru is a compelling illustration of how grassroots action, when structured smartly, can turn waste into wealth — and dignity. It shows that sustainable waste management doesn’t always need high-tech solutions; sometimes it just needs humanity, intent and community organisation.
Source: Mint Lounge, LiveMint