Delhi Metro launches Old Clothes Donation Project at 10 stations with DMRC-govt MoU
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Delhi's textile waste problem has a new institutional answer. The Delhi Metro Rail Corporation (DMRC) and the DMRC Ladies Welfare Organisation (DLWO) on Tuesday, 14 July signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Delhi government to launch the Old Clothes Donation Project — a structured initiative to collect, sort, upcycle, and recycle used garments from households across the capital. The signing took place in the presence of Chief Minister Rekha Gupta.
What the MoU Covers
The agreement was signed between DMRC, DLWO, the Delhi government's State Urban Livelihood Mission (SULM), and two textile recycling organisations — Clothes Box Foundation and Respun. Together, these partners will manage the full cycle of collection, segregation, upcycling, and recycling of donated garments. DMRC Managing Director Vikas Kumar and representatives of all partner organisations were present at the signing.
The Arpan Kendras: How Collection Will Work
At the heart of the project are collection centres called 'Arpan' Kendras, to be set up at 10 Delhi Metro stations in the first phase. Citizens can drop off unused clothes from 7 am to 7 pm daily. The stations selected for the initial rollout are Shahdara, Dr Baba Saheb Ambedkar Hospital, Malviya Nagar, Hauz Khas, Dwarka, Mohan Estate, Lajpat Nagar, Mayur Vihar Phase-1, Punjabi Bagh West, and Shalimar Bagh. Kiosks selling recycled and upcycled products will also be installed at these locations.
Three-Category Sorting System
Donated clothes will be sorted into three distinct streams. The first covers garments suitable for upcycling — these will be handed to Self-Help Groups (SHGs) to be converted into bags, decorative items, and other usable products. The second covers clothes that are beyond reuse and will be industrially recycled into new raw materials. The third addresses clothes used in religious rituals and sacred materials, which will be respectfully reused or recycled to honour community sentiments — a detail that distinguishes this project from standard textile recycling drives.
Women's Employment at the Centre
The Arpan Kendras will be operated entirely by women associated with SHGs under SULM. They will receive specialised training in textile upcycling and recycling, and a portion of donated clothes will be made available to them directly for upcycling — creating a livelihood loop within the circular economy model. Chief Minister Gupta described the project as 'an innovative step towards reducing textile pollution, promoting sustainable lifestyles and creating new employment opportunities for women.'
Scale and What Comes Next
The 10 Arpan Kendras are explicitly described as a first phase. The Delhi government has indicated the network will eventually expand across all parts of the capital. Officials also noted that parallel solutions are being developed for damaged idols, plastic waste, and other complex waste streams. This comes amid growing pressure on Indian cities to address landfill overflow — textile waste is among the fastest-growing components of municipal solid waste nationally.