TreeToTextile Builds Demonstration Plant For Upscaling New Sustainable Textile Fiber

STOCKHOLM — February 23, 2021 — TreeToTextile, owned by H&M Group, Inter IKEA Group, Stora Enso, and LSCS Invest, is investing 35 million euros in constructing a demonstration plant in Sweden. It is a critical next step towards commercializing a new sustainable textile fiber, with scalable technology and low manufacturing cost. The aim is to make sustainable textile fibers available to all.

All over the world, sustainable textile fibers are in growing demand. TreeToTextile is committed to enabling brands, companies, and others with a progressive agenda, to have access to sustainable textile fibers. TreeToTextile offers a new technology to produce biobased textile fibers with a low environmental footprint at an attractive cost level. The new fiber is a regenerated cellulosic fiber, produced from renewable and sustainably sourced raw materials from the forest.

TreeToTextile’s strong sustainability performance is confirmed by a third party verified Life-Cycle-Assessment study1. Looking at the sustainability targets, the new technology would mean less use of energy, chemicals and water when benchmarked to the production of conventional fibers. The novel process is deliberately designed to have low energy demand and low chemical need. It is engineered to suit large scale production and includes a recovery system for reusing chemicals.

Our technology has the potential to reduce the environmental footprint of the textile industry significantly. With our owners’ support, innovative agendas, know-how, and size, we assess that TreeToTextile can play an important contributing part globally, in enabling the textile industry to become sustainable and circular, says TreeToTextile’s CEO Sigrid Barnekow.

TreeToTextile is now investing to construct a demonstration plant for upscaling the process technology. The cost is 35 million euros, which is funded with an investment of 27.4 million euros from the owners, H&M Group, Inter IKEA Group, Stora Enso, and LSCS Invest, and a grant of 7.6 million euros from the Swedish Energy Agency. The plant will be established at Stora Enso’s Nymölla mill in southern Sweden, and the construction will start in spring 2021. The production capacity will be 1,500 tons fiber per year.

The key to creating real change is cooperation. We are a young organization and at the beginning of our operations, but by investing in a demonstration plant, we are finally on the go. With it we are turning years of R&D into reality to increase the biobased share on the textile market to support climate action. That is why this is an important point in time, not only for TreeToTextile, says Roxana Barbieru, chairwoman of TreeToTextile; vice president, Emerging Businesses and Alliances Management, Biomaterials at Stora Enso.

Posted February 24, 2021

Source: TreeToTextile

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