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Group of African dancers in traditional attire
Group of African dancers in traditional attire

Fast Fashion is Destroying the Local Textile Industry in African countries

Before the read

Q: What happens to donated clothes after they leave the donation bin?

Many end up flooding African markets, disrupting local industries and creating hidden problems.

Q: How is fast fashion linked to environmental damage in Africa?

The afterlife of fast-fashion garments often leads to toxic landfills and polluted waterways across African cities.

Q: What is waste colonialism and how does it affect African countries?

It’s when wealthy nations export their unwanted clothing and trash, exporting both waste and consequences to developing nations.

Fast Fashion is Destroying the Local Textile Industry in African countries

Before the read

Q: What happens to donated clothes after they leave the donation bin?

Many end up flooding African markets, disrupting local industries and creating hidden problems.

Q: How is fast fashion linked to environmental damage in Africa?

The afterlife of fast-fashion garments often leads to toxic landfills and polluted waterways across African cities.

Q: What is waste colonialism and how does it affect African countries?

It’s when wealthy nations export their unwanted clothing and trash, exporting both waste and consequences to developing nations.

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If you walked the streets of Uganda’s capital twenty years ago, most people would have been dressed in brightly colored, handmade textiles known as Kampala fabric, named after the city itself. The fabric had been crafted for centuries in a multi-staged, elaborate process. Wax was applied to the cloth before it was dyed, to create elaborate patterns in colors as vibrant as a flower bed.

Today, you still see Kampala fabric, as well as other traditional African textiles. But they are increasingly being replaced by cheap, secondhand Western clothing. Fast-fashion rejects arrive in Kampala by the barrel, decimating the local textile industry and harming the environment in their wake.

Western Guilt Trip

Nowhere in Kampala is this phenomenon more visible than at Owino Market, one of the largest secondhand clothes markets in the world. The sheer scale of it is awe-inspiring. You can walk around for hours, getting lost in alleyways lined with piles upon piles of clothes: Zara, Forever 21, Shein, and a few designer pieces buried in the heaps.

Men and women walk through with barrels of clothes on their backs, purchased from wholesalers. Those wholesalers, in turn, receive the clothes from charities that collect them through donation bins in Western cities.

I’ve used these donation bins many times—whenever I wanted to clear space in my wardrobe for the latest fashions. Giving my clothes away even helped ease the guilt of consuming when I knew it wasn’t necessary. “It’s for charity,” I would think, without examining too closely what happened to the clothes afterwards.

But now, seeing the tons of clothing—much of it low-quality, falling apart, completely wrong for the local climate, and destined to be burned in a landfill half a world away from where it was purchased—I finally understand what actually happens when you give clothes away.

Destruction of Local Textile Industries

You might think you have some statement pieces in your wardrobe, but trust me, they’ve got nothing on kanga, a type of fabric popular in East Africa. Kanga carries literal statements—printed with Bible verses, political opinions, and sometimes even village gossip.

Kanga is just one example of how textiles carry deep cultural roots and are often rich with messages and symbolism.

All of that is put in danger when barrels of cheap, ready-made garments flood the market. Local textile artists simply cannot compete with the low prices of secondhand clothes, and many families can no longer afford to spend extra on traditional fabrics for everyday wear.

As a result, demand for locally made textiles plummets. Artisans close shop. Skills that had been passed down for generations begin to disappear. With no incentive to invest in local production, countries become dependent on imported clothing, having lost the ability to produce their own.

Take Nigeria, where over 100 000 people were employed in textiles in the 1980s. Today, that number is less than 20 000, despite the population having more than tripled.

Three men wearing traditional red Maasai clothing
Colorful stacked rolls of vibrant African fabric

Of course, the secondhand clothes themselves bring jobs. That much was clear from Owino Market, where people work from dawn till dusk, carrying, sorting, fixing, and selling garments. But these are largely low-paid jobs that generate far less economic value than traditional textile manufacturing, and offer far less creative satisfaction for the people doing them.

Environmental Impact

When we talk about the environmental impact of fast fashion, we usually think only of what happens during production. For example, the fashion industry is responsible for 8–10 percent of global carbon emissions and 20 percent of all industrial water pollution. A pair of blue jeans alone takes 790 gallons of water to produce. Of that, 30 gallons are used for dyeing. This dyeing process often pollutes waterways with chemically contaminated water.

But if you follow the thread of fast fashion, you realize that the harm doesn’t stop once the garment is made.

In Accra, the capital of Ghana, the Korle Lagoon is bordered by a 20-meter-high cliff. It isn’t made of rock or sand, but of landfill, and 60 percent is unwanted clothing. As synthetic fibers disintegrate, they become microplastics that spread into the soil and the lagoon below, polluting what was once an important water source.

Child sitting near traditional African drums outdoors
Vendors selling second hand clothes at market

Meanwhile, in Nairobi, Kenya, the Dandora dumpsite is equally inundated with textile waste. Some of it is burned, releasing toxic fumes and exposing nearby residents to respiratory diseases and skin infections from the chemical-laden smoke.

Waste Colonialism

This same pattern is playing out across African countries. Western countries send their waste, and local communities pay the price for our overconsumption.

The phenomenon is part of a broader trend known as “waste colonialism.” This term refers to the practice of wealthy countries exporting their waste, including plastics, electronics, and fast fashion textiles, to poorer nations.

Like all forms of colonialism, it involves wealthier countries exploiting poorer ones. The West benefits from lower waste-disposal costs and often weak regulatory frameworks.

Meanwhile, the Global South gets piles of discarded goods it didn’t ask for, environmental damage from the waste that can’t be reused, and an economy increasingly reliant on managing other people’s trash.

Eloise Stark
Contributing Team Coordinator & Content Strategist

London, UK

More by this author

The Wrap

  • The rise of fast fashion in the West has led to a flood of secondhand clothes in African countries, harming local economies.
  • Traditional textile industries like kanga and Kampala fabric are declining due to cheap imported garments.
  • Secondhand fashion markets offer jobs but lack the cultural value and economic sustainability of homegrown textile production.
  • Fast fashion’s environmental impact extends beyond production — landfills in places like Accra and Nairobi are overflowing with synthetic waste.
  • Discarded clothing often ends up burned or polluting waterways, causing long-term health and ecological harm.
  • Waste colonialism highlights an ongoing pattern: wealthy countries exporting their clothing waste to nations with fewer resources to manage it.
  • Addressing this issue requires more conscious consumption, sustainable fashion choices, and global accountability for textile waste.

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