INTRODUCTION
The international the textile industry has transformed. According to Lipovetsky (2013): “Today, fashion is not only an aesthetic and peripheral luxury of collective life, but has become a central element of a social process which governs the consumption of objects”. This statement can be understood from different perspectives, such as haute couture or the analysis of cyclopean and asymmetric global production chains that enable textile production at low cost (ILO International Labor Organization, 2015) where, according to the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe UNECE (2018), “one out of every six people in the world works in a job related to fashion, and 80% of the workforce in the entire supply chain are women.” In many cases, these production chains pivot on the lack of both human rights (HRs) and opportunities for the workers in these chains (Human Rights Watch 2015). According to a report by Oxfam Intermón (2016, p.6), “Textile companies invariably take advantage of their position of strength to continue paying poverty wages”, in addition to being the worst industries in the world in relation to the environmental pollution they produce (Kant 2012).
The impact of the textile transnational corporations (TNC) on the environment is inherent to their industrial activity (Vandevivere et al. 1998, Pinheiro et al. 2004), while they run concurrent impact programs based on corporate social responsibility (CSR) policies in a continuous attempt to make the brands be, and seem, sustainable. It should be highlighted that a lack of legislation in many of the producing countries and their weak regulations facilitate global textile production. For textile TNCs, it is always better to direct the market themselves, with voluntary improvements and sanctions through CSR policies, rather than via strong mandatory legislation verified by the public authorities. Nobody likes to be told what to do, and TNC even less (Luque et al. 2016b).
Professors Donaldson and Dunfee (1999), in their Integrative Social Contracts Theory, show multinationals the way, indicating that they are also moral agents and act as people, and should contribute to the well-being and harmony of the place where they carry out their industrial activity, despite choosing production sites in locations with weak legislation (Rhodes 1997). In relation to this issue, the researcher from the Institute of Molecular Biology, IBMCP, Mulet (2015) indicated that, “With respect to third countries, European companies benefit from non-existent environmental legislation. Is that ethical? I think it is not, but it is a political problem, not a scientific one.”
It is important to differentiate what a company must do, or what the law forces them to do, and what they really do. For Dussel (2015), “labor and environmental legislation varies by country and even within countries (for example, in the United States). My impression is that the best legislation -at least as an incentive- comes through clients: by them demanding that the entire chain meets specific demands.” There is, therefore, the need to develop a study that will enable us to understand, in a reasoned manner, the transversality and interconnection of the situations described above. We will do this thanks to 55 experts1 who present their academic discussion and analysis of concepts, by obtaining consensus among all the participants, and thereby increasing the reliability of the study object (Dalkey and Helmer 1963). In addition, a set of action guidelines is presented aimed at civil society, institutions, and the textile industry, to reduce the impact of production on the environment and generate consumption with greater guarantees.
According to the European Commission (2013) the textile industry is one of the largest and most polluting in the world, in addition to using chemical substances that have devastating consequences for both the environment and people (Chen and Burns 2006, Gallezot 2012, Oliveira et al. 2013, Browne 2015). In fact, due to the consequences of pollutants produced by the textile and tannery industry in Bangladesh, it is the first time in history that Doctors Without Borders have intervened in a country for reasons other than war or natural disasters (Muralidhar et al. 2017). In addition, “apart from heavy metals such as chromium, cadmium, lead, and mercury, a conglomerate of chemical products is discharged by tanneries into the environment.” We should remember that these circumstances lead to chronic dermatological and pulmonary diseases. The toxicity generated impacts freshwater, people, and both marine and terrestrial ecosystems, and it is necessary to exercise greater control over regulation of colorants and additives (Yuan et al. 2013). According to Luongo (2015), p.37) “It has been shown that these two groups of compounds [quinolines and benzothiazoles] released during clothes laundering are discharged into domestic wastewater and later into the aquatic environment [...]”. At the same time, about 100 different chemical compounds have been identified in textiles that present risks including skin irritation, reproductive toxicity, and carcinogens (US Occupational Safety and Health Administration -OSHA-, Jadhav et al. 2010)
We should note this emerging hidden damage in textile garments due to different agents responsible for various pathologies, like endocrine disruptors2. When Soriano (2015), head of the innovation area of the Spanish Textile Industry Research Association (Asociación de Investigación de la Industria Textil - AITEX), was consulted about whether chemical dyes could release highly persistent and difficult-to-isolate pollutants, and if these would be stored in the fat of living beings once they had entered the food chain, she noted, “[...] these substances enter the food chain and pass from living organisms (fish) to living organisms (people) in a sudden way, producing irreparable short-term, and even medium- or long-term damage.”
Other effects of textile production are energy consumption, photochemical pollution, and waste production (Labouze et al., 2006). Textile production processes increase the carbon footprint (Beton et al., 2014) as well as the water footprint (Chapagain et al., 2006), since huge quantities of water are required for making textile products. For Bevilacqua et al. (2011), the textile chain’s main contribution to the greenhouse effect is through the consumption of electricity and thermal energy for transport. It is worth remembering the great degree of delocalization and the number of suppliers, aspects encouraged by companies searching merely for the best price and less control. In a similar way, they push the level of human rights down to reduce their costs, a situation that TNCs promote through enormous economic resources, influence, and corruption (Luque et al., 2017a).
In this case study, the central hypothesis examines the relationship of transnational textile companies (textile TNCs) with the environment through their corporate social responsibility (CSR). This is done by analyzing each of the questions presented to the experts, including the relationship of power over the existing natural resources -and the ruthless appropriation of these- necessary to develop production, as well as the effect of this industry on people3, living things4, and the natural environment.
Environmental determinants
Climate change is a reality that generates an amalgam of regulations and constant asymmetries. It is a real threat of limitless scope and consequences, many of which are unpredictable (others are predictable and evident), that alter production methods, societal biorhythms, and modify all types of ecosystems that are not precisely natural (Jacobson and Price, 1990;, Pawlik, 1991; , Dietz and Rosa, 2002; , University of Copenhaguen, 2009; , Ramonet, 2010; , IPCC, 2014). Climate change affects industrial developments and, implicitly, the choice of countries chosen for productive activity -with more lax legislation- as well as affecting the consumption model, since it is impossible to isolate this from the natural environment. According to Duarte (2014), a professor and researcher at the Mediterranean Institute of Advanced Studies, “There is no reasonable doubt about the influence of human activity on the global climate, nor about the fact that this influence has comprised an increase in the global average temperature.” In addition to that described above, climate change generates further reasons for violent conflicts and new forms of wars (Welzer, 2009). According to a 2015 report5 by the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific:
During the first half of 2014, the highest number of storms in the last five years occurred in the Asia and Pacific regions. The number of storms increased by 70%, with serious consequences in several countries such as Afghanistan, Bangladesh [in Bangladesh alone there are more than 4,500 textile factories], Cambodia, China, the Philippines, India, Myanmar, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Vietnam, and the Pacific region. In Sri Lanka, for example, 22 of the 25 districts were affected by the severe flooding that touched approximately 1.1 million people.
Nowadays, it is not possible to hide behind certain obsolete industrial developments from the past, like the use of old and polluting machinery, while profiting from deliberately obsolete legislation, however profitable this may be for the interested parties (Human Rights Watch 2012). For Morin (2015, p.2):
Because humanity is currently threatened by deadly dangers (multiplication of nuclear weapons, unleashed fanaticism and the multiplication of internationalized civil wars, the accelerated degradation of the biosphere, crises, and imbalances in an economy dominated by unbridled financial speculation), the life of our species itself and, inseparable from this, the biosphere, become a primary value, an imperative priority.
The current economic model is based on perpetual growth. Its consequences enter via our windows -air quality and climatological effects derived from the global warming of the Earth-, our lungs via the air we breathe, legally contaminated (or unhealthy) products, inadvertent exposure to chemical substances, and so on. These situations truncate the population’s life model, principally in the most disadvantaged regions. According to Stern et al. (1992), climate change is the most complex environmental threat humans have ever faced. According to the European Environment Agency, (EEA (2016), the effects of climate change produce extreme weather phenomena, such as increased global temperatures, the appearance of heat waves (augmenting health risks by increasing infectious diseases), intense rainfall, and more frequent droughts. It causes sea level rises, creates dead zones lacking oxygen, the Arctic sea ice and glaciers are reduced, as is the snow cover produced; it even increases plant life in Antarctica with dramatic effect (University of Exeter, 2017), impacting inexorably on terrestrial and marine biodiversity. For just the member countries of the European Environment Agency (2016), the effects deriving from climate change have meant financial losses of more than 400 billion euros since 1980. Climate change affects harvests, increases the displaced population, produces floods6, conditions the scarcity of water resources, and so on. According to UNESCO (2016, p.29), “[...] by the year 2050 between 150 and 200 million people could be displaced as a result of events such as desertification, sea level rise, and the increase of extreme weather events.” Herring (2014), from Northeastern University, estimates that climate change will generate an increase in extreme cold waves in Europe and the USA. According to Jim Yong Kim, President of the World Bank Group, “Scientists tell us that if the temperature of the Earth increases by 2ºC -which can occur in 20 to 30 years- this phenomenon will cause widespread situations of food shortage, unprecedented heat waves, and more intense cyclones” (World Bank, 2013). According to a study by Kelley et al. (2015, p.1) “There is evidence that the 2007-2010 drought contributed to the conflict in Syria. It was the worst drought in the instrumental records, causing a generalized crop failure and a massive migration of farming families to urban centers. […]”. The situations described above are encouraged by the textile industry due to the high environmental impact of their activity (Herva et al., 2008), demonstrating the long shadow of progress behind many catastrophes, amplified by the unlimited hyper-consumption of textiles (Luque 2017b).
The companies of the future are those that have the greatest capacity to implement the correct balance between the rights and obligations of their workers -including the production line- together with a real environmental policy that goes beyond the meager current regulations. This includes generating competitive advantages through non-aggressive developments, an aspect highly valued by the consumers who reward or punish companies through their purchases. For this, it is necessary to prepare real forecasts of costs, consequences, and responsibilities in textile developments, such as, for example, pollution rates. According to Matthews (2015), “The United States is responsible for 40% of the global debt for climatic damage.” It is appropriate to establish a replacement rate for direct and indirect damage caused to our natural environment deriving from industrial production. This must be implemented realistically and without subterfuge through impact action, in many cases under the umbrella of CSR action. Standing out by way of example are jobs related to climate change, adaptation to regulations, and the emergence of new consumption-related family and society models. For all these reasons, there should be an organizational transformation based on cultural change. We should point out the possibility that this could encounter resistance from certain agents with interests in working today as they did in the past, with no kind of environmental restriction and with maximization of profit as the business ideology, squeezing out any sustainability either through action or omission. For the Indian sociologist and former director of the Center for the Study of Developing Societies in New Delhi, Nandy (2015, p.1):
There is no environmental catastrophe for which there is not a lobby -political, scientific, or economic elites- that fences off the argument of progress to absolve the people responsible for the destruction they have caused. From Three Mile Island to Chernobyl, through Minamata, Bhopal, or Fukushima the same story is repeated. Progress is not an innocent idea. Now it is an ideology that people are willing to kill and die for.
According to McKinsey Quarterly (2007), only 23 % of companies take into account the impact of climate change when choosing a provider. As an example, the Inditex textile TNCs has 6,000 suppliers working for them in more than 45 countries (Boix 2016). Consumers are unaware of the commitment of these companies and subcontracted workshops, with the environment. According to UNECE (2018):
The fashion or apparel industry has an often-underestimated impact on the development of our planet. This $2.5 trillion industry is the second most intensive water user in the world, producing 20 percent of global wastewater. Producing a cotton shirt requires 2,700 liters, the same amount a person drinks in 2.5 years. 10%Ten percent of global carbon dioxide emissions are emitted by the textile industry, and cotton is responsible for 24 % of the insecticides and 11 % of the pesticides, despite using only 3 % of the world’s arable land.
CSR and transnational textile companies
According to the data published by the World Trade Organization (WTO, 2015), in just garments the sector generates exports of €483 billion (without counting other textiles that represent €314 billion); €290 billion of this is generated in Asia alone. This is an aspect known by the textile TNCss, and which they are not willing to let slip away from them. To this end, they articulate favorable legislation (including custom-made laws), carry out production in countries with high levels of corruption, and take advantage of weak working conditions in producing countries, many of which have anemic levels of ratification for ILO conventions (Luque, 2018). TNCss encourage a great deal of competition, even between the factories of identical brands in different countries fighting for the same order to push the price down. They create dependence in certain suppliers (monopsony), thereby increasing the power and decision control of the textile TNCs. This business model has the capacity to impose private dispute-resolution systems (arbitrations) between companies and States, conditioning investments while at the same time delegitimizing and minimizing the competencies of the indigenous courts by reducing the maneuverability of the States (Luque and de Pablos 2016a ). There is a continuous and systematic use of the environment that constantly degrades it, without the textile TNCs assuming the real consequences of this depletion, in addition to the effects deriving from textile production processes (Senthilkannan, 2015), despite all TNCs having voluntary improvement programs as part of their social responsibility policies.
This is the context in which the CSR policies that are to be analyzed were created and developed. Beginning in the 1990s, TNCs deployed and strengthened these practices with the aim of correcting abuses in their own global production chains by indirectly avoiding more rigid legislation and more ethical policies, transposing unilateral CSR measures. Despite involving millions of dollars, custom studies, favorable ideological currents7, business support of all kinds, certifications, books, lobbies, audits, impact campaigns, and so on (Smith, 2014), it is clear that this model has been a resounding failure due to unilateralism and lack of enforceability. According to Berrón (2015) “[…] corporate social responsibility works like a social wash or, in the best cases, it is implemented by companies that are already clean, in other words, those that by and large do not violate rights.” Correctly managing CSR policies, without subterfuge, can help improve both the company’s performance and its relationship with the other agents in continuous movement. For this, the first step must be strict compliance with the law, or this should be established in a solid, credible way using internationally recognized parameters where necessary, an aspect TNCs take advantage of for their own benefit. CSR is a complementary element and not a substitute for the law, bearing in mind what society expects through its actions (Rojas et al., 2006; , Costa, 2007,; Barroso, 2008).
METHOD
The Delphi method combined with an interview are the best tools for analyzing the relationship of textile TNCs, subsumed to processes of globalization in continuous movement, and the environment, from any perspective, including the empirical one (Martinez Piñeiro, 2003; , Landeta, 2006). It is important to understand the reality of the phenomenon as the transformation and evolution of the textile sector globally, with new methods of production, management, legislation, and so on, but at the same time including systemic deficiencies, such as industrial relationships with the environment, a situation that we should analyze in this study, using the Delphi technique (Ruiz Olabuénaga and Ispizua, 1989; , del Rincón, Arnal, Latorre, and Sans, et al. 1995). Changes in the business environment open society to new solutions (Applegate, 1994), a circumstance that creates a new paradigm to study.
The Delphi method
The Delphi method is a prospective technique that allows a consensus to be found through a set of key issues that have been put forward, in this case by two panels of experts based on the discussion of a specific problem. According to Martinez Piñeiro (2003, p.451) “the main aim of this technique is to find a consensus of opinion among a group relating to a specific problem, the solution to which and possible future situation is difficult to predict.” Arias (2003) states that it is assumed that new, innovative research methods will emerge, enabling the development of new theories and challenging many of the current models, as well as providing different perspectives on a given contingency, even in areas of uncertainty or with little empirical evidence (Pill, 1971). For Linstone and Turoff (1975), it is a method for structuring a group communication process, which has an effective result when it comes to allowing a group of individuals, as a whole, to deal with a complex problem. According to Mengual (2011, p.146), a particular individual tends to have lower reliability than a homogeneous group of people in equal conditions, which is also, as Vélez Pareja (2002) points out, ideal for studying topics where obtaining information from both the past and the future is not clear. For Luna Huertas et al. (2006, p. 94) “The Delphi method, unlike other qualitative techniques like focus groups or nominal groups, allows information and opinions to be obtained from physically distant subjects, and enables the generation of ideas with open answers, in a well-structured way and with an added qualitative component.”
Process followed
A research question was defined through a proposal. To this end, the related literature was analyzed in addition to the subject to be studied: “What is the relationship of textile TNCs with the environment, as well as their responsibility for this with relation to their production processes and the use of favorable legislation?” Next, experts were selected and recruited, based mainly on the literature review, and the questionnaire was constructed as an analysis tool. The questions in the questionnaire were determining, taking into account the narrowness of the subject, literature, current situation, as well as the transversal nature of the topic. Once developed, the questionnaires were sent to the participants. As indicated by Martinez Piñeiro (2003, p.452), “The researcher draws up a second questionnaire based on the answers received, often with closed answers that allow the group responses to be analyzed statistically”; another round of questionnaires or additional training may be sent if necessary, or the surveys withdrawn when there is little consensus or when it is observed that this cannot be improved upon, as indicated by Fernández-Ballesteros (1995). There is, therefore, no fixed or preconceived number of consultations. In this case, the second round questionnaire was sent to all the participants whose answers did not reach a consensus.
Questionnaire model
The questionnaire is a crucial tool in the process, and serves to collect information with the aim of obtaining a consensus among the participants in each panel.
The project involved experts and researchers in fundamental rights, the chemical-epidemiological sector, production managers, logistics professionals, economists, legislators, transnational corporations, lawyers, NGOs, laboratories, scientific disseminators, and so on, so it was decided to narrow the subject areas into two panels of experts: one on CSR, management and ethics; the other on epidemiology, laboratories, chemical scientists, health, and the environment. In both, multidisciplinary and common questions were included in the questionnaires. The first contained 20 closed questions with a Likert scale of 1 to 7, as did the second, with the exception that 10 of the closed questions were common to both. In this work we show those where there was consensus. After the first round we analyzed the 20 different questions and the 10 questions common to both panels.
The data collection tool for the closed questions used a scaled response format with the aim of measuring attributes, benefits, or losses, with 20 statements on each questionnaire (considerably reduced for the second round due to the degree of consensus). The key read “Put a cross (x) in the box corresponding to your degree of agreement with the statements below, relating to the subject of this investigation”, with 1 being total disagreement and 7 total agreement; participants could also leave comments on the statements. This Likert scale was used by Hamilton (1997), Patry et al. (1999), and Espino Rodríguez (2003), in various studies on externalization, for which reason we understand it to be a valid method for this work. According to Murry and Hammons (1995) it is the commonest tool for quantifying results in Delphi studies.
Subsequently and prior to the data collection process, consensus levels were established. This was 75 % in three contiguous categories. In other cases, such as that of Martinez Piñeiro (2003) a consensus is understood as 70 % affinity in at least two contiguous values on a scale of 1 to 5, which is why a percentage agreement of 75 % has been considered for three contiguous values when using a broader scale, from 1 to 7, as there is greater dispersion. It should be considered that the accumulated percentages allow the level of consensus to be established for each of the questions.
Collection process
After the surveys had been sent and collected, between 01/05/2015May 1, 2015 and 07/30/July 30, 2015, of the 55 questionnaires received, only 12 were received in the second round; it was noted that these contained almost the same position as in the initial survey. Indeed, some people did not respond, as it was explained in the procedure that if they did not do this in the successive rounds, the initial assessments would be used. The data received was then quantitatively analyzed, as were the participants’ observations and proposals.
Below is a detailed analysis of the data followed by the results obtained. Of the all statements developed and analyzed, we show those where there was consensus among the participating experts, the aim of the Delphi method (Landeta, 2002, 2006), and we also include quotes and relevant recommendations received from the experts.
Using the obtained data, a descriptive statistical analysis was carried out, which resulted in 6 six graphs from the two participant panels. We used the arithmetic mean (from 1 to 7), median, standard deviation, mode, and the inclusion of a graph of the results.
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The attitude of textile and chemical TNCs to the environment is inappropriate (Figs. 1 and 2). With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “The attitude of -textile/chemical- companies to the environment is appropriate”, according to the percentage of affinity collected, there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending against the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 1, 2 and 3, totaling 83.7 %.
The international expert in molecular biology and toxicology, Watson (2015), states, “It is sad to say that I do not trust the motivations of many of these industries -textiles, foodstuffs- whose background involves immediate profits for their shareholders, and this is their only concern”.
As a first approximation, the carbon and water footprints must be established. Salas and Condorhuaman (2014, p.25) delimit this: “A garment-producing textile company (textile and apparel processes) offers its customers climate- or carbon-neutral products as part of their interest in marketing their products in the green market.” Climate neutral means that greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions are minimized and neutralized throughout the value chain. For this reason, CO2 emissions must be inventoried throughout the value chain to avoid a lack of CSR8. TNCs should avoid the use of anemic or ad hoc legislations. As an example and bearing in mind the connection between the oil industry and its derivatives with the textile industry, Heede (2014) points out that Chevron, a leading company in the energy sector (petroleum), has sent more emissions into the atmosphere than the sum of all African countries put together since 1850, not including South Africa, and almost two thirds of historical carbon dioxide and methane emissions can be attributed to just 90 organizations. According to Breathelife2030 9 (2018), 92 % of the global population on an urban and rural scale live in areas with higher atmospheric pollution levels than those recommended by the WHO, and these contaminants are the principal causes of many common diseases. As an example, atmospheric pollution is responsible for 7 % of lung cancer deaths, 18 % of COPD (lung disease) deaths, 20 % of stroke deaths, and 34 % of deaths caused by heart disease.
With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “Multinational-transnational companies appropriate the environment through their resources but not their actual impacts and consequences”, there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending towards the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 5, 6 and 7, totaling 90.4 %. Values 1 and 2 received no affinity ranking. TNCs collect natural resources but not the real consequences of the use and transformation of these (Kant, 2012). For this, the private particularities of TNCs are transformed and legitimized as public or state interests, regulating in favor of trade, even over impacts and environmental sequelae (Underhill, 2016), thus fostering an unsustainable textile industry model (Luz 2007).
It is necessary to prosecute environmental crimes in a meaningful way (Fig. 3). With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “Environmental crimes (discharge, toxic waste, undervalued risks, damage to ecosystems, living beings, etc.) should really be prosecuted, published, and sanctioned in accordance with damage caused in the past and in the future (sequelae)”, according to the percentage of affinity recorded there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending towards the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 6 and 7, totaling 92.3 %.
We understand the vital nature of delimiting the consequences of textile production as well as the medium and long-term sequelae of its industrial developments (Azom et al., 2012). In fact, for UNECE (2018) “With regard to waste, 85 % of textiles are sent to landfills, in other words, 21 billion tons each year.” It is necessary to evaluate the considerable consumption of water in industrial textile processes, including the post-use discharge of a large quantity that is highly contaminated (Tüfekci et al., 2007). Activities that may be milimetrically legal but decontextualized and affected downwards by all the agents that make up the textile network such as TNCs, governments, certifiers, chemical companies, lobbies, subordinate workshops, and so on, should be articulated using international mechanisms capable of action and real containment at all points in the textile value chain, proposing, as an example, the creation of an International international Court court of Environmental environmental Justicejustice, or an International international Environmental environmental Inspectorate inspectorate for environmental crimes and abuse of global nature. The lack of justice in this field favors the loss of corporate legitimacy (Matthews et al., 1985; , Epstein, 1987, pp. 99-114). Iborra and Peris (2010, p.106) state that “[...] the legislation may be ambiguous or incomplete, in such a way that something may be legal but unjust according to the ethical maturity of a society.” For this reason, the asymmetry of existing regulations, together with the lack of real legislation in line with the volume of economic resources available to textile TNCs, has unpredictable consequences for human health and the environment. These circumstances can be amplified by “scientific research” according to particular interests, in many cases in the service of TNCs (Johns & and Oppenheimer, 2018). This paradigm reveals unilateral CSR action to have no real control or enforceability, only the self-promotion of their interests. “State intervention is decisive, since it must provide an appropriate environment and basis for the development of socially committed companies” (Hernández et al., 2013, p. 310). Publicizing positive business aspects that have nothing to do with the company’s main activity, or the consequences arising from its industrial production, will simply dress up the object of the CSR, in addition to testing the ability of society and the planet to resist.
It is necessary to develop ecological debt as a conceptual tool (Fig. 4). With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “It is necessary to articulate some type of procedure that regulates “ecological debt”, according to the percentage of affinity collected there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending towards the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 5, 6 and 7, totaling 92.1 %.
The concept of ecological debt recognizes the interconnections between society, nature, and the economy, including the impact on sustainability and climate change. In parallel, divisions and challenges derive from the accumulation of capital (Warlenius et al., 2015, p. 28). According to Alier (2015), “[…] there are environmental liabilities and debt for climate change that the world’s rich never pay. The consequences of financial debts are real but have been produced more artificially, and, in many cases, the debts per se are more fictitious. However, the debts generated by environmental damage and the negative effects of climate change are very real”, and this is not the only issue. Would it be responsible and ethical to wipe the slate clean, and make everyone pay the same when not everyone is equally polluting, or works to the same ends? Obviously no. The current contribution to global warming of countries such as India or China is notorious; however, environmental responsibility cannot be attributed solely to developing countries. We need to quantify which countries were successful in the Industrial Revolution, in the mid-eighteenth century, through their innovation and daring, but also due to an unlimited use of natural resources, and the subsequent consequences generated. To do this, we propose a retroactive quantification of the ecological debt, including its effects on the budgets of each State. This circumstance will generate an objective and reliable predictor that can be applied to States.
Endocrine disruptors merit a special mention (Fig. 5). These substances must be completely evaluated and identified. With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “EDCs (endocrine disrupting chemicals) need to be identified, regardless of whether they are used as pesticides, biocides, in cosmetics, food packaging, children’s toys, or in other products”, according to the percentage of affinity collected there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending towards the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 6 and 7, totaling 90.9 %.
Romano (2015), an expert on risks and hormone disruptors, states that “in the case of textile products, European regulations only require companies to inform consumers of the presence, in their articles, of any of the substances included in the REACH candidate list (about 160 substances)10, whenever consumers ask. There is no obligation to include this information on the label.” Endocrine disruptors have the capacity to alter normal hormone function and balance (Fernández et al., 2007; , Olea, 2009; , Jiménez and Kuhn, 2009), affecting embryo development; they intervene as unauthorized agents in the communicative process between hormones and cells (receptors), distorting the usual way of working and adopting a catalytic function (both through excess and lack). In many cases, they mask the action of the hormones themselves and cause the opposite effect to that of the typical hormone function; or they alter synthesis and normal metabolism, among other aspects, generating unpredictable consequences. For Romano (2015):
Spanish and European regulations allow the use of all chemical substances that are not restricted. In other words, they may be used as long as they have been shown not to cause an unacceptable risk to health and/or the environment. Demonstrating this involves a lengthy process of risk assessment, where the Commission or a Member State should be sufficiently concerned about the effects of the substance to prepare a restriction dossier.
The use of chemical compounds for which the health effects are unknown, or where there is evidence of them affecting animals and humans, cannot be considered necessary collateral damage for scientific advance (Fig. 6). With respect to the information received and analyzed on the answers to the question “The use of chemical compounds for which the health effects are unknown, or where there is evidence of them affecting animals (or humans), can be considered necessary collateral damage for scientific advance”, according to the percentage of affinity collected there was consensus among the participants when it came to tending against the proposal. The sum of the values with the highest affinity were 1 and 2, totaling 100 %.
Today there is great accessibility to chemical substances11, as Marti Valls (2011) points out. Sometimes they are used legally as they are not prohibited in certain countries12, but this is ethically questionable. Additionally, it is worth noting the existence of substances identified in textiles such as quinoline (a compound involved in dye creation), which is possibly carcinogenic to humans and a wastewater contaminant, as well as a problem for both public health and the environment (Luongo et al., 2014). Some substances are banned in Europe or the USA13, but when textile garments are analyzed they may contain these, including lead or endocrine disruptors, which researchers already warn us about in their studies14. Silver nanoparticles are antimicrobial substances used to inhibit malodor bacteria; these can be released in garment washing processes and subsequently absorbed by plants (Colman, et al., 2013). It should be noted that toxins from textiles can be incorporated into the body through the skin and via inhalation (Ibarluzea et al., 2016, p.2). There is enough evidence to suggest that these garments come from certain countries, already processed by means of labor and industrial practices that would never be allowed in other, advanced countries. According to the Textile and Clothing Information Center, Cityc (2015), “The problem lies in the varying environmental legislation in different countries. In the EU, there is REACH (Registration, Evaluation, Authorization, and Restriction of Chemicals) legislation. These regulations are very rigorous when it comes to chemical products, but REACH does not apply to imports from other areas, with the exception of products that are totally banned due to their harmful effects on health”.
CONCLUSIONS
The results of this research are of interest to consumers, public organizations, all kinds of counter-powers -such as NGOs and free thinkers- and, in particular, for textile TNCs.
The analysis undertaken evidences the critical, delicate environmental situation aggravated by the action of man (Fig. 1). The main environmental problems caused by current textile production can be listed as atmospheric and water pollution, a high toxicity level, and the generation of solid waste. We should note the ad hoc use of weak legislation that is not able to contain the asymmetries present through existing legislation. The life of society is marked by an unlimited production rate, even though it is well-known that natural resources are limited (Van der Ploeg, 2011). For this reason, the collection of resources must be regulated, in addition to the real consequences highlighting the inequality in growth, price effects, instability, poverty, unstable consumption, asymmetric exploitation rights, and so on (Rossignolo, 2015) (Fig. 2).
Social and business trends are submerged in publicized business developments. Everything must have impact, politics, the media, academic studies, and so on, which is why companies prioritize this type of action through CSR policies -and marketing- in order to achieve their goals, the long-awaited impact. For this reason, they make their clients and potential consumers -shortly, also voters- aware of their actions and commitment to the environment, despite the fact that society’s position is abundantly clear. Concessions are no longer made for the effect on the environment and the continuous over-exploitation it is subjected to. Today it is not possible to defend the environment with the same weapons the large corporations use, due to their influence, power, and economic resources (Ziegler, 2013). According to Oxfam Intermon (2016, p.26):
The actors […] have done their utmost to prevent the adoption of laws aimed at improving transparency in relation to the benefits obtained by extractive industries and improving accountability. The American Petroleum Institute (API), one of the main detractors of these measures, dedicated at least 360 million dollars to fund lobbying activities to influence the US government between 2010 and 2014.
Even though it is possible to procure impact -and followers- without situations improving, environmental crimes must be prosecuted in a meaningful way, proportional to the damage caused and its sequelae15, despite the legal tightrope walking that exempts TNCs through the commercialization of sup and regulatory dysfunction. Abuses by TNCs must be audited proportionally to the damage caused (Fig. 3). For Gógova (2015), a researcher and expert in economic intelligence:
We can take a good lesson from animal life: they dedicate themselves to observing their habitat and the behavior of other animals, and to detecting patterns with which they establish the basis of their survival. Until we understand this, we will not have learned much: the environment surrounding us is as important as, or more important than, our characteristics as a company.
A system of action can, and should, establish a protocol of mandatory compliance that balances the regulatory asymmetry and the abuse committed by textile TNCs and governments, as, on occasion, countries that are tremendously rich in natural resources are depleted to exhaustion, being turned into basic States, in addition to outsourcing waste and all kinds of risks to these places in many cases (Grzybowski, 2012, p.119)16, de facto establishing impoverished growth. Hence, as an approximation to correct this, the following action guidelines prepared by the authors are proposed based on the interviews carried out with the experts:
1) Establishment of ecological debt (Fig. 4) as a minimum measurement of regulatory symmetry.
2) Accountability by managers, not only to shareholders. TNCs are legal entities subject to the rule of law, a circumstance that must be extended to the subjects that drive a company towards the abyss (being able to generate astronomical benefits while at the same time having cyclopean consequences for the environment). Double indictment -civil and criminal- for companies and managers is one of the pivotal points of CSR precepts. With no legality and effective security, business actions and their ethics are not credible.
3) Delimitation and specification of business developments at the global level. This should include both the sequelae generated by textile garments in the manufacturing processes (as well as inadvertent exposure), and in the mitigation mechanisms when obtaining permits, patents, homologations, certifications, tax exemptions for hiring, and so on. There is no possibility of hiding behind scientific advance to justify any type of collateral damage (Fig. 6).
4) Identification and real publication of 100 % of the components making up textile products and this made available to the public authorities who, together with the scientific community (not only the official one, protected by the big brands), must evaluate -and monitor- the risks and alternative studies (with fewer resources but a higher impact for health). The use of endocrine disruptors stands out (Fig. 5).
5) Calculation of the carbon footprint for each garment put on the label, including the transport of that piece, the procurement, and external transformation of the materials necessary for its production. A QR code would be sufficient to solve the foreseeable lack of space claimed.
6) The externalization of risks (chemical, radioactive, environmental, etc.) produced by textile production processes, cannot be subcontracted to poorer countries, with no resources, which in many cases have high rates of corruption or failed states in the shadow of governments eager for investment, without reliable national legislation and with a lack of international organizations to ensure this. A list of prohibited and permitted production activities must be drawn up -that may be revised- by countries lacking, in many cases, the means to develop this with technical and democratic guarantees.
7) Extension of the competencies of the International Criminal Court over financial and environmental crimes in an extraterritorial manner, including the entire value chain (precedents include the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea). Currently, only State cases can be brought to the Court of International Justice, not those from civil society, a circumstance that turns this organization into a counter-figure in the defense of citizens’ rights. In the same way, joint and several liability should be established for all the interveners and necessary cooperators.
8) Establishment of a biographic card as a public document, reviewable and extendable by public authorities, which can reflect sanctions, ratification of ILO conventions, knowledge of the entire production chain, not necessarily the names -they could be codes- but that they respect and promote the human rights, the real protection of the natural resources and of living beings that could be affected by their production.
9) Democratization of the composition of groups of experts formed by international organizations, with the purpose of avoiding pressure, bribes, irradiation by TNCs with particular interests, and so on, in order to improve transparency. An international resolution, or member of the panel of experts, can be vetoed if 2517 independent experts from the area with no financial interest in the purpose of the resolution challenge it. There are tools, such as the sending of anonymous documents, encryption, and so on, that allow the anonymous evaluation of texts by the scientific community and the issue of rulings in record time while maintaining direct anonymity.
10) Free Trade Agreements must be proposed to the legislative chamber of each country. A qualified majority is the minimum that will be required for approval. In addition, it should include a favorable independent report (prepared by an international public body), which encompasses the environmental impact of the treaty, as well as the tools and means necessary to reverse this in case of non-compliance or detection of sequelae deriving from its activity, indicated by the scientific community in their studies. The logical advance of the times and scientific evidence enable mechanisms to be established that readapt to new inverse realities. Free trade agreements should be back-dateable using the mechanism in point 9.
11) Compliance with and promotion of binding legislation by States, as well as the adoption of this, with independence of the tailor-made free-trade agreements developed between TNCs and governments eager for investment, that exempts them. It is essential to leave self-imposed impact actions for the internal corporate news bulletins of TNCs. As indicated by Gómez Isa (2006, p. 60) “despite the wind generators that appear in their ads” (associating their image with nature, ecology, and well-being), this does not diminish the opportunistic and image-washing ends.
12) Greater responsibility on the part of public powers (and citizen control of these), implementing the capacity to halt a textile/chemical industrial activity when an independent scientific study warns, by means of indicators, evidence, or reliable conclusions on certain latent risks, and/or manifests generated by the use of certain chemical substances or business practices. This includes the deliberate and uncontrolled expulsion of chemical substances to the natural environment through the obsolete legislation established. It is necessary to redirect the burden of proof towards textile TNCs, which must prove that the use of certain substances is harmless, and not world-class scientific experts with scant resources. The compliance with and use of antediluvian legislation, knowing that there are more rigorous, up-to-date laws with greater guarantees for human health, make TNCs jointly responsible, leading to criminal action against them and their facilitating elements (lobbies, corrupt governments).
13) Courts to which textile textile TNCs are submitted, prioritizing national and public jurisdiction instead of arbitrations such as ICSID or UNCITRAL, in order to not deprive States of competencies and legitimacy. A circumstance that must be decisive when establishing specifications in public purchases, a less expensive product cannot be the only variable taken into account.
14) Establishment of an environmental citizen unit supported by all the UN member countries with the capacity to act in the face of environmental catastrophes. Article 7, Paragraph 1k of the International Criminal Court is broad enough to include ecocide crimes.
15) Inclusion of the financial cost caused by the environmental damage to be included in the accounts of each State.