Man stepping on top of a mountain of dumped clothes

Fast fashion goes to die in the world's largest fog desert. The scale is breathtaking.

Clothing from many of the world’s favorite brands lies in discarded heaps in Chile’s Atacama Desert. How it got there tells the story of modern fast fashion.

Francisco Ángel, a hospital worker and student, makes extra money by scouring mounds of clothes in the Atacama Desert for items to sell. Each week, shipments of used garments arrive in Chile at the free port of Iquique. Resellers buy some, but tons of clothes end up here.
ByJohn Bartlett
Photographs byTamara Merino
March 05, 2024
13 min read

The Atacama Desert in northern Chile stretches from the Pacific to the Andes across a barren expanse of red-orange rock canyons and peaks. As one of the driest deserts on Earth, it’s a bucket-list destination for stargazing tourists who come for some of the clearest views of the night sky. With its arid, rocky landscape so closely resembling Mars, the desert has even attracted the attention of NASA, which has tested rovers there.

But the Atacama has also attained a less wondrous distinction as one of the world’s fast-growing dumps of discarded clothes, thanks to the rapid mass production of inexpensive attire known as fast fashion. The phenomenon has created so much waste that the UN calls it “an environmental and social emergency.” The challenge is turning off that tap.

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The numbers tell the tale. Between 2000 and 2014, clothing production doubled and consumers began buying 60 percent more clothes and wearing them for half as long as they once did. Three-fifths of all clothing is estimated to end up in landfills or incinerators within a year of production—that can translate to a truckload of used clothing dumped or burned every second. Most of the facilities are in South Asia or Africa, where the nations receiving those loads cannot handle the amount. A landfill near Accra, Ghana’s capital, that is said to be 60 percent clothes and 65 feet high has gained international notoriety as a symbol of the crisis.

three women are seated with dozens of trashbags of clothes surrounding them. They are each going through one bag each.
Workers sort apparel at Ecocitex, a factory in Santiago that recycles discarded clothing. Some items will be turned into yarn, others cut up and used as stuffing  for cushions.
Two people are holding up a tangle of yarn across the frame
man holding up a messy knot of yarn in front of his face
Ecocitex workers organize tangles of raw yarn made from recycled clothes. Next, the material will be processed by a machine that will further refine it, yielding strong, finished yarn.
Shot was taken above a person standing with a pile of clothing scraps
Juan Rosales Mora, 72, is in charge of collecting the mixture of recycled clothing that has been shredded by industrial machines at the Ecocitex factory in Santiago, Chile. This mixture, called textile fleece is then converted into yarn of specific colors, without using water or dyes.

The scene in northern Chile has been dubbed in one online video “the great fashion garbage patch,” a terrestrial variation of the better-known Great Pacific Garbage Patch. Colossal piles of discarded clothes, with labels from all over the world, stretch as far as the eye can see on the outskirts of Alto Hospicio, a hardscrabble city of 120,000 residents. In one ravine, a pile of jeans and suit jackets, bleached by the harsh sun, rises above a mound of fake-fur coats and dress shirts, some still bearing price tags. Bottles, bags, and other trash are mixed in.

As images of the clothing heaps spread on the internet, many Chileans expressed surprise. “I was shocked to think that we were becoming the textile dump for developed countries,” says Franklin Zepeda, a director of a company that focuses on circular economic practices. But the story of how the South American nation came to be a repository for the world’s apparel rejects has as much to do with globalization and trade as it does with fleeting style trends.

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At first glance, it might seem that an isolated desert nearly a thousand miles from Chile’s population centers would be an unlikely destination for fast fashion’s discards, but the country is also home to one of South America’s largest duty-free ports—located in the coastal city of Iquique on the Atacama’s western edge. Millions of tons of clothes arrive annually from Europe, Asia, and the Americas. Last year’s tally was 46 million tons, according to Chilean customs statistics.

overview shot of how large the dumping group for clothes is compared to the village in the back.
Mountains of discards reshape the landscape outside Alto Hospicio. Each year tons of clothing is added. Much of it is made from non-biodegradable synthetics and will remain part of the Atacama for generations.

Duty-free ports encourage economic activity, as goods are imported and often reexported without the usual taxes and fees. The duty-free port was established in Iquique in 1975 to help generate jobs and improve an ailing local economy. Chile became one of the world’s largest importers of used clothes, which transformed Iquique. As fast fashion exploded, so did imports.

“The zona franca [free zone] was a true revolution” for the city’s residents, says Bernardo Guerrero, a sociologist at Fundación Crear, an organization that studies Iquique’s history and culture. “They suddenly had access to things they could never have imagined, like their own car.” Apparel began washing in and out of Iquique like waves as global fashions changed. Guerrero recalls a time in the 1990s when almost everybody in the city wore the same style of puffer jacket after large shipments of them arrived. It was a sign of what was to come.

About 2,000 businesses of all types now operate in the duty-free zone; more than half are foreign. Hand-painted brand logos adorn warehouse doorways, and stacks of used cars—another major import—tower over the narrow streets. The free zone has also developed into a sorting depot for textile waste.

“In essence, we are just recycling the world’s clothes,” says Mehmet Yildiz, who arrived in Chile from his native Turkey two decades ago and operates a clothing import business named Dilara. Yildiz brings in clothes from the United States and Europe, most of them from thrift stores such as Goodwill. Once the garments reach Iquique, workers separate them into four categories, ranging from premium to poor quality. Yildiz then exports the best to the Dominican Republic, Panama, Asia, Africa—and even back to the U.S. for resale.

a side portrait of an older woman. Lighting is dark, and her grey hair is pulled back.
Manuela Medina, 70, is credited with starting the use clothing trade in Alto Hospicio, a hardscrabble city of 130,000 residents, almost two decades ago after buying a bale of used clothes. She lives today in a wooden and box house near the growing accumulation of dumped clothes. 
pile of clothing with a shadow cast over
As if the accumulating mounds of clothes are not bad enough, fires are occasionally set on some, releasing black clouds of toxic smoke. 
pants burned into the dirt ground
The remains of a pair of pants burned in one of the fires has been spread out on the desert floor. 

Clothing that the importers don’t want ends up in the hands of truck drivers who ferry it a few miles to the dump outside Alto Hospicio, where it goes through another cycle of sorting and resale in small shops and street markets or at La Quebradilla, a huge open-air market. There, a roaring used-clothes trade continues on a half-mile-long strip of some 7,000 stalls. A recent visit turned up faded T-shirts commemorating the 2001 U.S. Open golf tournament, a jacket emblazoned with the logo of a Texas police force, and a wool hat with the badge of a California university, among a sea of other castoffs.

Clothing that doesn’t sell at the market is destined for the desert, and much of it is made from synthetic materials that won’t biodegrade. Scavengers salvage what goods they can. On a cool afternoon, a woman named Génesis rummaged through a pile of formal clothes, nurses’ uniforms, underwear, and Crocs, taking fleeces and blankets for the cold nights and earmarking the better garments to sell at La Quebradilla, where they may fetch a handful of coins.

“Everything is useful to me,” she said brightly, laughing as she imagined herself in a brand-new summer dress printed with strawberries. “We’re lucky to have found this.”

a woman selling tea from a cart in the middle of a clothing market
A woman sells tea from a cart in La Quebradilla, a market in Alto Hospicio. Merchants there pay $20 for 1,320-pound bales of used clothing and resell the garments for roughly 12 cents to two dollars each. 

As helpful as resale markets might’ve been in an earlier era, they’ve been overwhelmed by the sheer scale of the mounting discards. New efforts, large and small, are under way to deal with clothing waste, and attention to the mess in the desert may inspire additional projects.

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In 2018, Franklin Zepeda founded a start-up that manufactures building-insulation panels from textile waste. “I was motivated by the idea that there was a vast quantity of waste that could perfectly be transformed into raw materials to make new products, reducing the amount of clothes in our desert,” he says.

Another start-up, Ecocitex, based in Santiago, makes yarn from discarded clothes. “Our mission is to eliminate textile waste from Chile,” says Rosario Hevia, Ecocitex’s owner. “It made me so angry that there wasn’t a solution, so I’ve thrown myself into solving it.” Meanwhile, in Iquique, the clothing importer Dilara plans to open a recycling plant this year to make fillings for couch cushions from used clothes.

an aerial view of a busy port with fishing boats floating nearby
An aerial view of fishing boats floating near the duty-free port in Iquique on the northern Chile's Pacific coast. The port, established in 1975 to spur the local economy, is today one of the largest duty-free ports in South America.  

These are small but crucial steps. The most promising solution—one that can handle the problem’s scale—lies in the hands of the Chilean government. The World Bank forecasts 3.4 billion tons of garbage will be created every year by 2050. As it piles up, many countries are requiring manufacturers to take responsibility for their products at the end of those products’ lives. Policies known as extended producer responsibility have been adopted in India, Australia, Japan, Canada, and some U.S. states.

In 2016, Chile passed a version into law, calling it Extended Liability of the Producer, or Ley REP for short. The law makes producers and importers accountable for six categories of waste: lubricant oils, electronics, batteries, small batteries, containers and packaging, and tires. Initially, textiles were not listed.

Tomás Saieg, who heads the Chilean environment ministry’s Circular Economy Office, says a team is working to add three more product types to the Ley REP, including textiles.

“The most important thing is to turn off the tap, so to speak, so that these clothes don’t keep ending up in the desert,” he says. “Converting Chile from a junkyard into a recycling hub would be the dream.”

In the meantime, must-have trends blink in and out of fashion, online sales keep churning, and mountains of forgotten clothes continue to grow amid the red sands of the Atacama Desert.

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shadows of two individuals who are standing in front of a sheet holding up clothing.
Two children examine a frilly skirt to be sold at La Quebradilla. As one of Chile's largest open-air markets, it supports a roaring used clothing trade along a half-mile-long strip of more than 7,000 stalls.
Editor's note: This story was originally published on April 10, 2023. It has been updated.

This story appears in the April 2024 issue of National Geographic magazine.

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