logo
#

Latest news with #Majeranowski

Circ to build $500 million cotton, polyester recycling plant in France
Circ to build $500 million cotton, polyester recycling plant in France

Yahoo

time16-05-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Circ to build $500 million cotton, polyester recycling plant in France

By Simon Jessop LONDON (Reuters) -U.S. textile recycling firm Circ has received backing from the French government and European Union to build a $500 million plant in France that will be the first to recover cotton and polyester on an industrial scale, its chief executive told Reuters. Announced by the French government on Friday, the plant at Saint-Avold in the northeast of the country will be able to process 70,000 metric tons a year after it starts operating in 2028, and employ 200 people. Funded through a mix of equity and debt, the 450 million euro ($504.09 million) plant will look to access grants and guarantees including the Strategic Projects Guarantee from the French state, Chief Executive Peter Majeranowski said. Creating a 'circular economy' by recycling more is a key part of the EU's efforts to reach net-zero emissions by 2050, although efforts to-date have been patchy. Majeranowski said the new factory would mark a turning point for the industry. "This will be the world's first industrial scale polycotton (recycling plant)," he said. "Now, most of the clothing produced is a blend of polyester and cotton, and that makes it very difficult to recycle, so having this facility is a major landmark milestone." The U.N. has said the fashion industry is responsible for up to 10% of global greenhouse gas emissions and uses more energy than the aviation and shipping industries combined. The industry is also a major consumer of water and polluter of water sources. A number of companies are developing technologies to recycle the millions of tons of polycotton waste created every year, amid demand from retailers keen to burnish their sustainability credentials and meet tougher regulations. Circ uses hydrothermal technology to break down the polyester without damaging the cotton, such that both can be recovered in the same process and reused. Clothing retailers Inditex and Patagonia have both taken stakes in Circ and its recycled materials are already being used by brands including Inditex-owned Zara. Partners in the building of the factory include Worley, GEA, and Andritz and the aim is to use it as a model for future plants, Majeranowski said, with strong demand from producers and suppliers keen to help fashion firms meet their climate goals. "We have a lot of interest from all over the world, from South Asia, East Asia, in the States of course, Canada, Australia," he said. ($1 = 0.8927 euros) Sign in to access your portfolio

Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts
Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts

Fashion Network

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • Fashion Network

Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts

The $1.7 trillion fashion industry is a major polluter: By one estimate, it's responsible for between 8% and 10% of annual greenhouse gas emissions, more than aviation and shipping combined. Clothes manufacturing relies on fossil-fuel-derived fibers like polyester and guzzles energy and water. And the churn of fast fashion means that many items are discarded soon after they're purchased, which has contributed to eye-popping amounts of textile waste. Two textile-focused startups are among this year's BloombergNEF Pioneers award winners: Circ, in Danville, Virginia, turns mixed-fiber fabric back into its reusable raw materials, while Paris-based EverDye has developed a lower-impact textile dyeing process. Much of the fabric produced today is a blend of cotton and polyester, which is more durable than pure cotton. But the blended fibers are extremely difficult to separate and therefore challenging to recycle. 'It's so hard to mechanically separate them. You can't comb it apart,' says Sonja Salmon, a textile science professor at North Carolina State University. 'A machine will think it's the same thing.' That's why Circ turned to chemistry instead. Its technology uses water as a solvent, plus pressure, to break down large polyester molecules — polymers — into their building blocks, or monomers, says Peter Majeranowski, the company's president. This helps separate the two types of fiber. Circ then purifies the polyester monomers and the cotton so they can both be reused in textile production. The startup has spent significant time 'refining and developing our process to ensure that our materials are better than virgin, from a greenhouse impact,' says Majeranowski. In addition to venture and supply chain investment, Circ has received investment from Patagonia, Inditex (Zara 's parent company) and the European fashion platform Zalando SE. The company would like brands to sign multi-year contracts to use material recycled with its technology. But making commitments for several seasons is uncommon in the industry, Majeranowski says — 'a muscle that brands aren't used to.' Dyeing the fabric that gets sewn into garments is an energy-intensive step in the manufacturing process. Conventionally, pigments are heated to very high temperatures so that the color can bind. EverDye says it's found a way to do this with room-temperature water. Mineral pigments used for textiles are generally negatively charged, says Christelle Chauffeton, a research scientist at EverDye. The fabric is also negatively charged, so the two have no affinity and the color won't adhere. That's why the dyeing process typically relies on additives, binders and high heat. EverDye takes mineral pigment and 'synthesizes it directly on a nanoparticle of biopolymer,' says Chauffeton, that was chemically modified to be positively charged. When the biopolymer (or natural polymer) is put next to a negatively charged fabric, the pigment will go on the fabric without additives or the need for intense heat. Later, another application of heat causes the nanoparticles to come together and form a film on the surface of the fibers, trapping the pigment. The startup can now dye fabrics brown, orange or yellow and is fine-tuning its approach to create blue, red and black hues. 'It takes time to adapt the formulas,' says Victor Durand, EverDye's head of operations. It launched a small capsule collection last October and is doing pilot testing with brands including Lacoste and Petit Bateau. The company is currently raising money for its series A funding round. 'Our goal is to be a regular provider of dyes in the supply chain,' Durand says. EverDye and Circ join a host of firms innovating in pursuit of lower-impact textiles, such as Boston-based Galy, which grows cotton in a lab to reduce the crop's heavy water and fertilizer use, and Algaeing, an Israeli startup that makes biodegradable yarns and dyes out of algae. Buying clothing secondhand — or just buying less of it — is an effective way to shrink fashion's footprint. But the global business of making new garments isn't going away anytime soon. Circ, EverDye and their peers are working to clean up the process step by step.

Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts
Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts

Fashion Network

time23-04-2025

  • Business
  • Fashion Network

Fashion is the next frontier for clean tech as textile waste mounts

Much of the fabric produced today is a blend of cotton and polyester, which is more durable than pure cotton. But the blended fibers are extremely difficult to separate and therefore challenging to recycle. 'It's so hard to mechanically separate them. You can't comb it apart,' says Sonja Salmon, a textile science professor at North Carolina State University. 'A machine will think it's the same thing.' That's why Circ turned to chemistry instead. Its technology uses water as a solvent, plus pressure, to break down large polyester molecules — polymers — into their building blocks, or monomers, says Peter Majeranowski, the company's president. This helps separate the two types of fiber. Circ then purifies the polyester monomers and the cotton so they can both be reused in textile production. The startup has spent significant time 'refining and developing our process to ensure that our materials are better than virgin, from a greenhouse impact,' says Majeranowski. In addition to venture and supply chain investment, Circ has received investment from Patagonia, Inditex (Zara 's parent company) and the European fashion platform Zalando SE. The company would like brands to sign multi-year contracts to use material recycled with its technology. But making commitments for several seasons is uncommon in the industry, Majeranowski says — 'a muscle that brands aren't used to.' Dyeing the fabric that gets sewn into garments is an energy-intensive step in the manufacturing process. Conventionally, pigments are heated to very high temperatures so that the color can bind. EverDye says it's found a way to do this with room-temperature water. Mineral pigments used for textiles are generally negatively charged, says Christelle Chauffeton, a research scientist at EverDye. The fabric is also negatively charged, so the two have no affinity and the color won't adhere. That's why the dyeing process typically relies on additives, binders and high heat. EverDye takes mineral pigment and 'synthesizes it directly on a nanoparticle of biopolymer,' says Chauffeton, that was chemically modified to be positively charged. When the biopolymer (or natural polymer) is put next to a negatively charged fabric, the pigment will go on the fabric without additives or the need for intense heat. Later, another application of heat causes the nanoparticles to come together and form a film on the surface of the fibers, trapping the pigment. The startup can now dye fabrics brown, orange or yellow and is fine-tuning its approach to create blue, red and black hues. 'It takes time to adapt the formulas,' says Victor Durand, EverDye's head of operations. It launched a small capsule collection last October and is doing pilot testing with brands including Lacoste and Petit Bateau. The company is currently raising money for its series A funding round. 'Our goal is to be a regular provider of dyes in the supply chain,' Durand says. EverDye and Circ join a host of firms innovating in pursuit of lower-impact textiles, such as Boston-based Galy, which grows cotton in a lab to reduce the crop's heavy water and fertilizer use, and Algaeing, an Israeli startup that makes biodegradable yarns and dyes out of algae. Buying clothing secondhand — or just buying less of it — is an effective way to shrink fashion's footprint. But the global business of making new garments isn't going away anytime soon. Circ, EverDye and their peers are working to clean up the process step by step.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store