BusinessMirror

Breaking down fashion’s waste problem

-

IT started with an offhand request. Entreprene­urs Peter Majeranows­ki and Conor Hartman were testing a way to recycle the fibrous stalks left over from tobacco farming, using hydrotherm­al pressure to turn them into pulp for paper, when a Swedish commoditie­s trading company called up with another idea. “They were like, ‘Hey, this pulp stuff you’re doing is great, but can you try putting a T-shirt through your machine?’” Majeranows­ki recalled.

They obliged, and as luck would have it, it worked. Most importantl­y, it worked on polyester-cotton blends, the most common textile produced by the global fashion industry.

Until recently, any recycling process that preserved the polyester polymers would degrade the cotton fibers, and vice versa. This has led to a major buildup in fabric waste. Every second, a garbage truck’s worth of clothing and textiles gets incinerate­d or tossed in a landfill, according to a 2017 report from the Ellen Macarthur Foundation.

As it turned out, Hartman and Majeranows­ki’s Virginiaba­sed company, Circ, was able to do both. Business changed overnight, Majeranows­ki said. “Suddenly, we’ve got the fashion industry cold-calling us—brands you’d see in any mall in Anytown, Usa—who wanted a circular recycled textile solution.”

Circ’s process involves a combinatio­n of water, heat, pressure, and chemicals, which break down and purify the textile fibers, recovering 90 percent of the original materials.

So far they’ve recycled only about 12 tons of apparel waste, but the co-founders say they have the capacity to do two tons per day once their partnershi­ps ramp up. Outdoor gear-maker Patagonia Inc. and Japanese trading company Marubeni Corp. are investors, and Patagonia is already funneling some of its worn-out clothing through Circ’s machinery. The pair also expect to begin producing fully recycled garments later this year through a collaborat­ion with Fashion for Good, which works with major brands and retailers such as Kering Group and Target Corp. to promote sustainabl­e practices and technologi­es.

Other companies use similar biochemica­l or thermal pressure processes to dissolve old materials, but Circ’s edge comes from its ability to work with blended fabrics, said Greg Curtis, Patagonia’s general counsel on investment­s. “When you look at the total addressabl­e market for fast fashion, and the poly-blend rubbish that comes out of it, that really does set them apart,” he added.

The company’s history begins in 2010, when the market crash dried up Majeranows­ki’s previous work with an overseas investment group. He got interested in biofuels, and eventually met Hilary Koprowski, a Polish immunologi­st known for his pioneering work on the Polio vaccine. At the time, Koprowski was looking into whether tobacco plants— which grow easily and have a well-known genome—could be geneticall­y modified to produce antibodies for a vaccine. (In 2014, they would be: Icon Genetics used tobacco plants to create the Zmapp Ebola vaccine, though Koprowski wasn’t involved.)

Circ won’t disclose the price of its recycled fibers; its closest competitor, a subsidiary of fast fashion retailer Hennes & Mauritz AB (better known as H&M) won’t talk about prices, either. However both say the cost of their recycled textiles should be comparable to new.

A positive climate impact would be a key selling point for any business marketing recycled textiles, but proving that will be tricky. Because there’s so little accountabi­lity data in the fashion industry, there’s no generally accepted baseline from which to measure. “What we really need to see from these companies is reporting,” said Maxine Bédat, founder of New Standard Institute, which publishes sustainabi­lity resources for designers.“we need to know how great this innovation is in terms of greenhouse- gas emission figures, and so far we’re not getting that.”

Right now, Circ is focused on growth. Majeranows­ki and Hartman describe a “chicken and egg situation” in which nobody wants to collect and sort apparel waste until they have a buyer or for it. “Our solution right now is we need to scale for that all to make sense,” Majeranows­ki said.

Things are moving fast, Majeranows­ki said. “We joke now that we were like, is recycling a T-shirt a thing?” he said. Now they’re sure. “It’s a thing.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines