Published: August 18, 2005
Patagonia Announces Revolutionary Garment Recycling Program With Teijin
Becomes One of the First Global Companies in the World to Implement Garment Recycling
Patagonia, Inc., the outdoor gear and apparel
company, in partnership with Teijin, a progressive fabric manufacturer in
Japan, announced today the launch of the Common Threads Recycling Program.
This revolutionary program asks Patagonia customers to return their
worn-out Capilene® baselayers (a.k.a., long underwear) to Patagonia, to
be recycled into new garments. Worn-out Capilene baselayers will feed
Patagonia's own supply chain to make new Capilene in future seasons. With
the launch of this recycling program, Patagonia becomes one of the first
global companies in the world to launch a garment take-back recycling
program.
Research shows that the environmental impact of using worn-out Capilene
baselayers to make new polyester fiber is significantly lower than making
that same fiber from virgin materials. Via the Common Threads Recycling
Program, worn-out garments are diverted from trash incinerators. Making new
polyester fiber from used garments, that have been mailed from customers to
Patagonia, results in an energy savings of 76 percent and a CO2 emissions
[greenhouse gasses] reduction of 71 percent, versus creating that fiber
from new raw material.
"Our goal is to take responsibility for every product we make. This
includes responsibility for the fibers a garment is made of, as well as
what happens to a product at the end of its useful life. Garment recycling
is simply our first step towards a truly environmentally sound process,"
explained Michael Crooke, president and CEO of Patagonia.
"We recognize that everything we make pollutes -- and most of it eventually
ends up in landfills. Moving forward, with our customers' help, the 1.3
million Capilene pieces we sell each year will potentially live on in
perpetuity."
Effective September 12, 2005, customers may return used Capilene baselayers
to Patagonia, via mail or at any of the 20 Patagonia retail stores
nationwide. These worn-out baselayers will then be transported via
container ships (which usually travel back to Asia empty) to Teijin's
recycling facilities in Japan. There they will be broken down and made into
new Capilene garments using Teijin's EcoCircle(TM) fiber-to-fiber recycling
system. With EcoCircle, worn-out polyester garments are recycled into
virgin-quality fibers by breaking down the fabric to the molecular level
and creating new polyester raw material. Beginning in Spring 2007,
Patagonia's Capilene baselayers will be made with more than 50% recycled
content, using garments collected from customers.
"It was critical for us to find a partner who could help us keep our
product out of the landfill at the end of its useful life. With Teijin's
help, we'll feed our own supply chain with used Capilene baselayers rather
than relying solely on scarce virgin resources like petroleum," said
Crooke. "It's our hope that many other companies will recognize the value
of garment recycling and take advantage of this revolutionary system."
"EcoCircle is a perfect example Teijin's commitment to developing
technologies that are friendly to people and the environment," said
Yoshinaga Karasawa, senior managing director and chief marketing officer of
Teijin. "We are very pleased that Patagonia will be the first company to
use the EcoCircle recycling system in the U.S., and we hope that other
companies will follow Patagonia's lead and participate in this innovative
system."
Just as Patagonia pioneered the use of recycled soda bottles in fleece and
was the first company in the outdoor industry to switch to 100% organic
cotton, the company aims to pave the way for others to get on the garment
recycling bandwagon. For more information, visit www.patagonia.com. Contact
Teijin www.teijin-eco.com to see how other companies can participate.
About Patagonia
Patagonia is noted internationally for its commitment to product quality
and environmental activism. Its Environmental Grants Program has
contributed over $20M in cash and in-kind donations to grassroots
environmental activists since the program began in 1985, and its
Environmental Internship Program allows employees to work for environmental
groups while receiving their full paycheck. Incorporating environmental
responsibility in to product development, the company supports the
ambitious mission statement: "To make the best product, cause no
unnecessary harm and use business to inspire and implement solutions to the
environmental crisis." Since 1996, Patagonia has used only organically
grown cotton in its clothing line, and is noted worldwide for using
recycled soda bottles in many of its polyester fleece garments beginning in
1993. Sales for 2004 were $240 million.
About Teijin
The Teijin Group (Teijin) is a multinational enterprise comprised of nearly
160 companies in seven business groups including textile fibers, industrial
fibers, films, plastics, medical and pharmaceuticals, fiber marketing
products and IT. The company's brand statement, "Human Chemistry, Human
Solutions," communicates their commitment to developing cutting-edge
technologies that are friendly to humans and the environment. For the past
five years, Teijin has been ranked as a member of the Dow Jones
Sustainability Indexes, which evaluate the economic and environmental
performances of companies. Teijin established the world's first chemical
recycling technologies for fibers, films and bottles. EcoCircle is
organized by Teijin Fibers Ltd., the core company of the textile fibers
business group. Sales for 2004 were $8.5 billion.
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