This Italian Company Wants Your Fashion To Be Made From Rubbish

By Chiara Remondini
Washington Post
Stella McCartney summer 2019 at Paris Fashion Week, featuring an ensemble made from Econyl. Photo @econylbrand Instagram

"When I look at a landfill, I see a goldmine," Giulio Bonazzi, the founder and chief executive officer of nylon manufacturer Aquafil, said in an interview.

As volumes of plastic-based waste reach a tipping point in oceans and trash heaps around the world, Bonazzi's company is recycling the material and turning it into nylon used to make upscale apparel and accessories.

And with heightened consumer awareness and tougher environmental rules, the CEO sees unlimited potential for sales of the company's Econyl thread. The yarn is made from recycled material which may have started life as carpet or industrial plastic, or even part of an abandoned fishing net  an increasingly promising area for recycling.

"Consumer demand for new products is almost endless, but the planet's resources aren't," Bonazzi, 56, said. "That's okay, because we can have both state-of-the-art products and a better environment."

Check your label: you may already own a swimsuit, workout clothes or casual wear made from Econyl. Adidas AG, Levi Strauss & Co. and Speedo International and New Zealand brand Kowtow are just a few of the better-known clients using the yarn, according to the company.

Consumers may be more willing than ever to pay premium prices for products made from planet-friendly materials, and Bonazzi says Econyl, which accounts for nearly 40 per cent of Aquafil's fibre sales, is clearly a "top-quality and thus top-margin" product for the company.

That's borne out by the fibre's use by high-end fashion names like Gucci, the CEO said. The Stella McCartney brand has also said it will stop using virgin nylon by 2020 and use more Econyl.

Legislation is helping push the trend too. While the European Union made headlines with a ban on consumer items like plastic plates, cutlery and straws beginning in 2021, a less noticed part of the initiative includes dealing with abandoned fishing gear, which represents about 27 per cent of marine litter.

A significant number of disused fishing nets are not collected for treatment and, together with single-use plastic products, that poses "a severe risk to marine ecosystems, biodiversity and human health," according to the text of new EU legislation. Member states should tighten rules to ensure collection and waste management, it says.

That's where Aquafil comes in, the CEO said. The company is already benefiting from a "positive announcement effect" from the EU directive, he said, with major fishing-net consumers reaching out to the Arco, Italy-based company on collection and recycling.

"While any move in this direction is appreciated, Europe could have been bolder and set stricter goals," Bonazzi said. "The hope is that individual countries will understand the importance of this measure and act swiftly. Time to save the planet is running out."

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