13 Jul

Material Guide: How Sustainable is Fleece?

Fleece – a cosy, soft fabric that keeps us warm through winter and in the great outdoors. But have you ever wondered what impact our fleece jackets might have on the planet? We ask, how sustainable is fleece?

What is fleece?

Fleece is a synthetic insulating fabric made from a type of polyester called polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or other synthetic fibres. It is very comfortable due to its light weight and anti-perspiration qualities, and allows moisture to evaporate, while blocking humidity from the outside. It is breathable and fast-drying, which makes it perfect for sportswear and winter clothes. As it uses only synthetic fibres, fleece is also a vegan alternative to wool.

What is fleece made of?

Fleece fabric is usually made from a type of polyester called polyethylene terephthalate (PET) or other synthetic fibres, woven and brushed into a light weight fabric.

Other materials can be used and added when making the fabric, including natural fibres, like wool, or recycled fibres, like recycled PET plastic.

A brief history of fleece

In the late 1970s, Malden Mills, an American textile maker now known as Polartec, began experimenting with polyester’s potential.

In 1981, the company introduced fleece to the sportswear market thanks to a collaboration with Yvon Chouinard, owner of a then-little-known mountaineering outfitter called Patagonia.

The first-generation of fleece was called Synchilla, and within a decade it was used widely in sports and outdoor clothing. Fleece became trendy for its lightness, warmth, colourfulness but also for its relative inexpensiveness and completely changed the way we dress for cold weathers. Fleece technology is continuously improving, the yarn is now as fine as cashmere and can even be made from recycled plastic bottles

Is fleece sustainable?

Let’s look at the environmental impact of fleece! Generally speaking, it’s made from non-renewable resources and needs an extra chemical coating to make it windproof and/or water resistant – not great for the environment. What’s more, fleece can only stand so many trips through washing machines and dryers before showing signs of wear meaning it has to replaced relatively often.

Eco-fleece, using recycled polyester, can be seen as a better option saving its primary ingredient – raw petroleum – as well as energy. It also potentially reduces the number of bottles in landfills.

But synthetic fibres, recycled or not, pose a problem as they do not biodegrade and tend to bind with molecules of harmful chemical pollutants found in wastewater, such as pesticides.

What about microfibres?

A recent study from the University of California at Santa Barbara and funded by Patagonia found that, on average, synthetic fleece jackets release 1.7 grams of microfibres each wash, or as many as 250,000 synthetic fibres and that older jackets shed almost twice as many fibres as new jackets. Even when companies use recycled plastic bottles to make their fleece, research indicates that the plastic might ultimately end up in the oceans.

Those synthetic microfibres are particularly dangerous because their size allows them to be consumed by fish and other wildlife, going higher and higher up the food chain, concentrating toxins, until they reach us.

Although fleece is a lighter and less-scratchy alternative to wool, its impact on the planet and eventually on animals and consumers make it not such a great option! So when looking for warm clothes, try and stick to natural fibres!

Learn more about sustainable and ethical materials.

Editor's note

Feature image via Patagonia. Good On You publishes the world’s most comprehensive ratings of fashion brands’ impact on people, the planet and animals. Use our Directory to search more than 3,000 brands. We may earn a commission on sales made using our offer codes or affiliate links.

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