Sweden's secondhand clothing swaps offer a trendy way to cut
environmental waste
[April 23, 2026] By
CHISATO TANAKA
STOCKHOLM (AP) — Alva Palosaari Sundman scoured the racks of secondhand
clothes in Stockholm for hours in search of the right pair of preowned
jeans.
The 24-year-old art student was among hundreds of people attending an
annual clothing swap on Sunday at a community center in Sweden's
capital. They exchanged their own clothes to “shop” for others. Similar
events drew thousands across the country to reduce the environmental
cost of clothing production.
Palosaari Sundman said she enjoyed seeing others pick out the clothes
she’d brought.
“It’s like, ‘Oh, OK, it gets a new life with this person,’” she said.
“It just feels a bit more humane.”
The U.N. Environment Program cites fast fashion as major player in
environmental damage, producing up to 10% of the world’s carbon
emissions. Discarded clothes gorge landfills that scar landscapes in
developing countries, and the plastic fibers used to make cheap fabrics
pollute oceans.
To produce a pair of jeans, for example, roughly 2,000 gallons (7,571
liters) of water is required, UNEP has said.
Sweden's clothing swap initiative began in 2010 and has grown. Last
year, some 140,000 people participated in 140 swap events and took home
more than 44,000 preowned items.

Sweden is often seen as environmentally advanced, but the reality is
more nuanced. Clothing consumption contributes to roughly 3% of a
Swede’s total emissions, according to Mistra Future Fashion, a research
institute.
Swedes last year were banned from throwing away clothes in the regular
trash in a European Union bid to boost recycling. But the measure
backfired when municipalities’ collection sites were overwhelmed,
leading to stockpiles of unused textiles, and the government reversed
part of the rule in October.
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Meg Goldmann, right, a volunteer with the Swedish Society for Nature
Conservation, folds secondhand clothes at a clothing swap event in
Stockholm, Sweden, Saturday, April 19. 2026. (AP Photo/Chisato
Tanaka)
 The swap events are organized by the
Swedish Society for Nature Conservation. Its chair, Beatrice
Rindevall, said each Swede throws away around 9-10 kilograms (20-22
pounds) of clothes.
Swedes on average buy around 25 new items of clothing per year,
according to the society, and 90% of items in wardrobes are never
used.
“We have to be more careful and we have to think about our
consumption,” said Cecilia de Lacerda, one of the society’s
volunteers in Stockholm.
At the swap events, tailors helped shoppers repair clothes to extend
their life span.
“A lot of people don’t have sewing machines anymore, or they don’t
quite know how they should fix that buttonhole that broke,” said Meg
Goldmann, another volunteer.
For high school student Alice Dundeberg, 19, secondhand clothes
allow her to have a unique style.
“You don’t find multiple types of the same shoes, pants or sweater,”
she said. “No one has the same clothes as the others.”
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