Close
Contact Us
Help
Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Go to Login page
Hide details
Add to lightbox
Add to cart
Get link
Keywords
Actions and protests
Blue
Chemical products
Chemicals
Cleaning
Clothing
Consumers
Day
Detox (campaign title)
Dirty
East Asian ethnicities
Fashion
Greenpeace activists
KWCI (GPI)
One person
Outdoors
Pollutants
River pollution
Rivers
Textile industry
Toxics (campaign title)
Traditional clothing
Traditions
Women
'Dirty Laundry: Reloaded' Launch in Manila
Greenpeace activists use food coloring to ‘wash’ T shirts beside the Marikina River. The activists are illustrating how hazardous chemical residues in clothing items sold by major brands are released into public waterways when they are washed by consumers. This was shown in a study conducted by Greenpeace and released in the "Dirty Laundry: Reloaded" report. Greenpeace is challenging the textile industry to lead the elimination of toxic chemicals.
Unique identifier:
GP03TF7
Type:
Image
Shoot date:
21/03/2012
Locations:
Marikina
,
Metro Manila
,
Philippines
,
Southeast Asia
Credit line:
© Veejay Villafranca / Greenpeace
Ranking:
★★★★ (E)
Containers
Shoot:
'Dirty Laundry: Reloaded' Launch in Manila
Greenpeace activists use food coloring to ‘wash’ T shirts beside the Marikina River. The activists are illustrating how hazardous chemical residues in clothing items sold by major brands are released into public waterways when they are washed by consumers. This was shown in a study conducted by Greenpeace and released in the "Dirty Laundry: Reloaded" report. Greenpeace is challenging the textile industry to lead the elimination of toxic chemicals in industries and the introduction of mechanisms respecting public's right-to-know about toxic discharges, such as a Pollution Release & Transfer Register (PRTR).
Conceptually similar