Carpets are actually one of the least recyclable materials. A UK factory is trying to fix it – ThePrint

Do you ever think about what happens to your old carpets?

Well it might be time to start, because what’s under your feet is actually one of the least recycled materials around. It’s the focus for a new factory in the UK, which aims to reduce the amount of carpet that ends up in landfills and incinerators.

Innovate Recycle plans to take waste carpet and reuse its components at a facility in Northampton, England. It estimates just 2% of the 500,000 tonnes of end-of-life carpet produced in the UK each year is recycled.

Since the vast majority – around 75% of carpets – are made of materials like nylon and polypropylene and aren’t typically biodegradable, your old flooring is likely to spend a very long time in landfill after it has been ripped out, or head to the equally environmentally unfriendly incinerator.

A circular economy

These waste mountains are set against a wider backdrop where more than 90% of materials we use are either wasted, lost or remain unavailable for reuse for years, according to the Circularity Gap report, giving rise to a pressing need for a more circular economy that reduces and eliminates waste.

The World Economic Forum’s Consumers Beyond Waste initiative works to develop responsible consumption models. One area of its focus is on finding ways of scaling reuse models to help eliminate plastic waste.

Responsible consumption … learning to make things last longer. Image: The Circularity Gap Report

Much of the Forum’s work looks at making our linear economic system more sustainable. It estimates we consume 75% more resources each year than Earth can naturally regenerate, which is unsustainable.

As part of the solution, the Forum focuses on The Circulars Accelerator – which aims to connect disruptive start-ups with cross-industry leaders and circular experts to change the way industries do business.

This year’s winners include Re-Fresh Global, a German company that tackles textile waste. It converts low-value textile waste into high-value raw materials that can be used in the construction and automotive industry, by textile and fashion producers, the medical and cosmetics industry, and packaging producers.

Three different uses for recycled carpet. Image: Innovate Recycle

Innovate Recycling will recycle post-consumer and industrial carpet at volume, focusing on polypropylene-based carpets and the retrieval of polypropylene and calcium carbonate.

It sees uses for what it creates in the automotive sector, in injection moulding and 3D printing. Car manufacturers like Volvo and Peugeot Citroen are planning to use a minimum of 25% recycled plastic, particularly polypropylene, into their new vehicle models starting from 2025, Innovate Recycling says.

Carpet recycling rates are rising, but from a low base. Image: Aquafil

“Recycling carpets can help change our world for the better, but we must each do our part to make change happen,” Rachel Palopoli, Executive Vice President for Aquafil Carpet Recycling wrote on her company’s website.

“This means asking for legislation to incentivize carpet recycling, finding facilities to recycle your carpet when it’s time to replace it and seeking out designers and manufacturers who use sustainable, eco-friendly ingredients.”

Emma Charlton is Writer, Forum Agenda
The article was first published in World Economic Forum. You can read the article here. 


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Do you ever think about what happens to your old carpets? Well it might be time to start, because what’s under your feet is actually one of the least recycled materials around. It’s the focus for a new factory in the UK, which aims to reduce the amount of carpet that ends up in landfills and incinerators. Innovate Recycle plans to take waste carpet and reuse its components at a facility in Northampton, England. It estimates just 2% of the 500,000 tonnes of end-of-life carpet produced in the UK each year is recycled. Since the vast majority – around 75% of carpets…
Carpets are actually one of the least recyclable materials. A UK factory is trying to fix it – ThePrint
Source: Assent.Environmental