The Econyl Regeneration System: Cleaning up other industries’ lack of product lifecycle management planning
Aquafil has figured out how to depolymerise and repolymerise nylon, and the implications are huge
It might not occur to you that a deep-sea fishing trawler can simply dump their old, worn-out fishnets over the side. After all, no one is watching them out there. And as those nets sink, they can continue to trap ocean life and stay on the ocean floor for centuries, needlessly ensnaring even more fish.
Italian textiles company Aquafil has figured out how to turn this problem into a win for the planet. Led by visionary CEO Giulio Bonazzi, the company spent years figuring out how to completely depolymerise nylon, then repolymerise it. This means they can essentially create new nylon from old, “with no loss of quality” and without the need to suck any new petroleum out of the ground. After perfecting the process, which they call Econyl, they then needed to find a readily-available source of old nylon.
Take a look at the Econyl process below. What I found most interesting was Bonazzi recounting that had they known how difficult the process would be—others told him he was “crazy”—they might never have embarked on the project. But luckily for the planet, they did:
For designers and architects who want to learn more about the material and how to spec it, they’ve got information here.
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