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Monday, November 3, 2025

New recycling trial rolled out across Kirklees as residents asked to donate old clothes

Clothes in good condition will be sold, with the proceeds going to Yorkshire-based charity, Children's Heart Surgery Fund

Kirklees residents are being asked to donate their old clothing and textiles at one of ten locations across the borough, as a new recycling trial is rolled out.

Kirklees Council has partnered with Textile Recycling International (TRI) and wants residents to separate clothing and home textiles into two different specially designed textile collection banks. One will be for wearable and reusable items titled ‘Too good to throw away’ and the other for non-wearable/reusable items for recycling titled ‘Worn Out’.

The textile banks are situated in pairs at ten locations across Kirklees, with information on the front of each one, explaining the types and condition of textiles that can be donated. TRI will then sort the clothing at their hub in Manchester where, as part of a wider trial, it will be recorded whether the banks have been used correctly.

This data will be sent for evaluation and analysis to Waste & Resources Action Program (WRAP) until the end of October. Clothes in good condition will be sent on for resale, with the proceeds going to support Yorkshire charity Children’s Heart Surgery fund, while those that are no longer wearable will be recycled.

Materials from items sent for recycling could be used by UK-based clothing and textile manufacturers to make new clothing to be sold in the UK, creating a completely circular system with minimal environmental impact.

Councillor Munir Ahmed, Cabinet Member for Environment and Highways, said: “These new banks will remove any confusion as to what textiles can and cannot be recycled and make it even easier for residents to make the shift to a more circular economy. Once the data gathering has concluded the facilities will remain on site and continue to collect both reusable and non-reusable textiles, supporting our aim for a zero-waste future.

“Recycling is a great start, but it is important to fully embrace the hierarchy of waste by reducing waste, reusing what you can, and recycling everything possible.”

The trial is part of an Automatic-sorting for Circularity in Textiles (ACT UK) project, led by the UK Fashion and Textile Association (UKFT). Every year, the UK generates over one million tonnes of used textiles, but new recycling processes mean that the possibilities to recycle fibres are increasing in the UK. The ACT UK project aims to enable the diverting of thousands of tonnes of textile waste from landfill and disposal each year.

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