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© SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA.
© SGS Société Générale de Surveillance SA.
Polyester is durable, versatile, affordable, scalable and has a high tensile strength. According to Textile Exchange, it is the textile industry’s most used material, with 47 million tonnes (Mt) in 2022, compared to 23 Mt of cotton, 11 Mt of leather and 4 Mt of nylon.1 As the industry transitions toward circular economies, what barriers and solutions exist for polyester recycling?
In 1975, polyester accounted for just 15% of global fiber production. By 2022, its share had grown to 54%, and projections suggest it will reach 67% by 2030.2 However, only 1% of polyester is recycled into new textiles and the vast majority ends up incinerated, landfilled or downcycled, despite taking centuries to decompose and contributing significantly to microplastic pollution and toxic emissions. Addressing this imbalance is critical to building a more sustainable future for the fashion industry.
Sustainability is increasingly a key market driver for consumers, putting pressure on brands to adopt recycled polyester and cut their reliance on virgin, fossil-based inputs. At the same time, tightening legislation, extended producer responsibility (EPR) schemes and carbon reduction targets make recycling a compliance requirement and a competitive advantage.
Legislation impacting the use of polyester includes:
Recycling is defined under the EU Waste Framework Directive as: “any recovery operation by which waste materials are reprocessed into products, materials or substances, whether for the original or other purposes.”3 In practice, textile recycling can be either upcycling, where old garments and fabric scraps are made into new clothes, or downcycling, where discarded clothes are turned into lower-value items such as insulation.
The traditional life cycle of a textile product is linear:
A better approach is to reduce input quantities at the raw material stage by integrating recycled feedstocks, e.g. from plastic bottles. It is also possible for fibers, fabrics and garments to re-enter the system through second-hand resale, rental models and upcycling.
The goal must be to create a circular economy, where waste within the textile flow, either during production or at end-of-life, is retained in the loop, raw material inputs are reduced and downcycling is delayed.
Polyester is currently recycled either mechanically or chemically.
Mechanical recycling is well-established and widely used, often processing PET bottles into textile-grade polyester fibers. This purely physical process does not alter the chemical structure. However, without alterations, fiber quality is largely determined by the input, meaning color and purity can vary. Restricted substances originating from dyes and pigments, finishing agents, plasticizers, microplastics and detergents may remain as residues. Over time, repeated mechanical recycling will also lead to reduced fiber performance.
Chemical recycling differs because it breaks down the polyester into monomers using methods such as glycolysis, methanolysis, hydrolysis and enzymatic depolymerization. However, unlike mechanical recycling, this process does require chemical inputs:
Risks associated with chemical recycling include:
Once these potential risks are carefully managed, chemical recycling has several key advantages over mechanical recycling:
Ultimately, while mechanical recycling will play an important role in reducing our reliance on raw materials, carefully controlled chemical recycling offers us the clearest path to scalable, clean circularity.
bluesign, an SGS company, has been at the forefront of the clean chemistry movement for nearly 25 years. We support brands in eliminating hazardous substances in their supply chains, optimizing resource efficiency and ensuring textiles are safe for both workers and consumers.
Our services advancing polyester recycling include:
By combining rigorous chemical expertise with trusted verification, we empower the textile industry to scale polyester recycling responsibly, helping brands meet sustainability goals while protecting people and the planet.
Explore bluesign solutions for a safer and more sustainable textile industry.
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1The Future of Synthetics (Textile Exchange, April 2024)
2Materials Market Report (Textile Exchange, September 2024)
3EU legislation – Waste hierarchy