The beginning of the XXI century brought great changes in consumption patterns and the fashion industry offers a prime example of this with the number of garments purchased per capita shooting up 60% in 2014 in comparison with 2000, while items get disposed of twice as fast. Today, this translates into a garbage truck’s worth of textiles being dumped in a landfill or incinerated every second. If this tendency remains, a data extrapolation from the World Resources Institute shows that, among other indicators, the fashion industry’s greenhouse emissions will increase 50% by 2030.
The largest portion of the environmental footprint left by producing new clothes comes from its need for raw materials - with cotton and polyester being the most widely produced fibers globally. Cotton production uses 3.3 million acres of land and six billion cubic meters of water annually while polyester production requires the use of 70 million barrels of oil each year and generates up to three times more carbon emissions than cotton.
Luke Henning
Chief Business Officer at Circ
Undeniably, clothing makers need to transform their business models and their approach to materials now. Many companies have started acting, joining initiatives to use more sustainable and circular fibers, nonetheless, there is an urgent need to close the loop by recycling all kinds of textile fibers into virgin-like material to make new clothes.
Up until now, an effective recycling of textile fibers had not been possible. But Circ, our American customer and innovator in the field of textile recycling, is pioneering this space with a patented hydrothermal process that returns discarded clothing made of cotton, polyester and polycotton back into raw materials for new clothing production.
“Solve Big Problems” – is one of Circ’s principles to operate by and that is why, when it came to choosing a partner for the complex process that is textile recycling, they chose GEA for the monomer recovery process part.
To exactly meet its targets in monomer recovery and co-product treatment, Circ is working with GEA because of our decades-long expertise in evaporation, crystallization, heat transfer, mixing, solid/liquid separation, distillation and drying -all with the goal of producing PET chips out of discarded garments to use them for producing new clothes.
Laurent Palierne
Director Evaporation & Crystallization at GEA
Farid Ghaderi
SVP Engineering at Circ
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