Home Industry The LYCRA Company introduces EcoMade fibres made from 100% textile waste

The LYCRA Company introduces EcoMade fibres made from 100% textile waste

by Underlines

The LYCRA Company, a global leader in fibre and textile solutions for the apparel industry, is pleased to announce the launch of its first performance offerings made from 100% textile waste. COOLMAX® and THERMOLITE® EcoMade fibres made from textile waste are the result of a strategic collaboration between The LYCRA Company and ITOCHU Corporation, a general trading company with strength in consumer-related sectors, including the textile business. This is the first of several innovations that The LYCRA Company is working on in textile and garment recycling. Laying the groundwork for a more circular future is one of the key objectives of The LYCRA Company’s Planet Agenda Sustainability platform.

“We are pleased to announce our alliance with ITOCHU in helping to address textile waste, which represents a substantial sustainability challenge as the equivalent of one garbage truck of textiles is sent to landfills or incinerated every second,” said Julien Born, chief commercial officer for The LYCRA Company. “This collaboration exemplifies the synergistic approach we have to develop products and technologies that support a more sustainable future for our vast global customer base.”

Integrating textile waste technology with COOLMAX® and THERMOLITE® fibres provides consumers with the performance attributes they seek, while making these industry-leading fibres in a new and responsible way. A unique depolymerization and refining process is used to convert textile waste, which consists of scraps from garment manufacturers, into fibres with properties comparable to virgin polyester. The new fibres are available in filament and staple forms, suitable for common textile processes and insulations batting uses.

The industry’s preeminent cooling and warming performance solutions, COOLMAX® and THERMOLITE® fibres, have been made from recycled raw materials such as recycled PET bottles for many years. The company will continue to offer these products in parallel with those made from textile waste.

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