Home Green Design Lenzing Launches TENCEL Fiber Made from Cotton Waste Fabrics

Lenzing Launches TENCEL Fiber Made from Cotton Waste Fabrics

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LENZING, AUSTRIA—Lenzing achieved another milestone in its innovation heritage in the textile industry by developing a TENCEL fiber based on cotton fabric waste. Lenzing is the first manufacturer worldwide to offer such cellulose fibers incorporating recycled materials on a commercial scale.

TENCEL, already a market success as an eco-friendly fiber, is now achieving another key milestone by creating from natural resources what is likely the most sustainable fiber.

TENCEL from cotton waste fabrics will further build Lenzing’s reputation as a leader in the field of environmental technology and will push new solutions in the textile industry towards a circular economy by recycling waste.

“For Lenzing, developing circular business models in the fashion industry ensures the decoupling of business growth from pressure on ecological resource consumption,” says Robert van de Kerkhof, CCO of Lenzing. “It reduces the need to extract additional virgin resources from nature, and reduces the net impact on ecological resources.”

TENCEL has already been awarded the EU award for the most eco-friendly production process based on 99.7 percent closed loop circulation in the production and use of bio-energy. The renewable raw material of wood from sustainable forestry is another key advantage in terms of sustainability for TENCEL. The latest next-generation TENCEL fiber combines the best of two worlds—recycling cotton waste fabrics and using the most sustainable TENCEL technology—to create one of the most ecological wood-based fibers on the planet. The recycling of cotton waste fabrics into virgin textile TENCEL fibers offers a practical solution to enable a circular economy in the apparel industry.

Go to Lenzing.

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