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Jürg Rupp, Executive Editor
 

  

From The Editor: Devoted To Green?

By Jürg Rupp, Executive Editor

C enturies ago, when the European kingdoms began to rule the world, differences developed between the so-called West and East. It was well-known that the West enriched itself at the expense of the East. This fact even was strengthened beginning with the Industrial Revolution 200 years ago. Westerners enjoyed the fruits of the East including spices, natural resources, precious stones and oil. It was commonplace for economic upswings in the West to be carried out with the resources of the Middle and Far East.

Energy and mineral resources were not adopted consciously, but were unscrupulously wasted.

On the one hand, a first trend reversal was carried out in Europe when political groups like the "Greens" established themselves.

Environmental protection and not the worry over resources was the primary concern. These political groups were considered obstructers of economic growth. The concern regarding economic growth proved to be without reason; however, that growth did not occur in the way the West had imagined it would.

On the other hand, emerging countries of the Far East started more and more to intrude on international markets. This trend began in the 1960s, when first Hong Kong with textiles and then Japan with cars prepared to challenge the established world markets with their products.

The situation changed dramatically when mainland China, and in the last few years also India and other Asian countries, reclaimed their share of the world market for all kinds of products. The energy requirement, and thus also the prices for this energy, increased to dizzying heights. Now suddenly the world, and not only a couple of nongovernmental organizations, had a raw material and waste problem.

Today, energy savings and a gentle deployment of resources are no longer a political issue, but the only way to survive economically. The textile machinery industry also has to change its perspective. At the successful ITMA 2007 in Munich, Germany, many textile machinery manufacturers showed their latest machines and equipment, operating with less energy and fewer natural resources such as water, while maintaining ‹ and even improving - quality.

The Textile Industries Media Group ¹s textile magazines are devoting themselves to the topic of green. In 2008, various articles will be published under the label "Energy Plus," addressing the issue of economy and ecology.

November/December 2007

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