New Fibre Circulose® made from 100% textile waste with high cellulosic content.

Business Case

Last updated: Aug 23, 2022

Summary

Circulose is a recycled cotton product made from discarded textiles. In creating this material, consumers are diminishing their fashion footprint in terms of cutting waste, water, microplastics and more. Through recycling cotton, Renewcell is cutting down on production and post-consumption waste.

Problem

The fashion industry has traditionally been extremely wasteful, with a supply chain that involves producing vast amounts of cotton, using a great amount of water. Chemicals and treatments are also used to treat the clothes, which have been reported to be dangerous for both workers and consumers. When fashions and season's must-haves have passed, clothes end up in landfill.

Solution

Renewcell is on a mission to close the circularity gap. The 100% Circulose cotton is made in a patented processes involving converting used cotton into a pulp. Compared to other recycled fibres and materials in the market, this pulp can be broken down to a molecular stage and therefore can produce longer, more uniform fibres.

This is how it works:

1. Discarded textiles are taken in.

2. Clothes are shredded (with contaminants like plastics and polyester removed), and turned into a slurry.

3. What remains is the cellulose - the biodegradable organic polymer that cotton is made from.

4. The slurry is dried to produce sheets of Circulose, which is then packaged and sold.

5. Brands design and produce clothes using these fibres.

Outcome

Brands like Levi's and H&M have started to incorporate Renewcell's technology into their regular textiles. A fixable Chinese manufacturer of textiles, called Tang Shan San You, has invested in the company. The growing exposure of the benefits of Circulose cotton means sustainable textile materials are starting to shape the industry norm - becoming more circular.

Location

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Involved organisation(s)

Key elements of the circular economy

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Owner

Contributor

Date added: Jul 30, 2022

Last updated: Aug 23, 2022

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