Abstract

Zero Waste Scotland introduced the concept of the circular economy to the Scottish textiles sector at events throughout 2013 to 2014. In April 2014, it commissioned research by independent consultants to examine the academic and industrial textile landscapes in Scotland, including developments in technical textiles and research into innovation in textile design and examples of circular economy models. The research identified a number of initiatives, including projects producing an alternative to denim and one developing cavity wall insulation from processed natural fibres. It made recommendations to Zero Waste Scotland about shaping the future landscape of textile innovation in Scotland and also offered examples of the circular economy from Scandinavia that might be applicable. The implementation of the circular economy into Scotland’s textile sector, underpinned by the aforementioned initiatives, can learn too from its textile and fibre heritage. Zero Waste Scotland is implementing an action plan which will offer support to the textile industry exploring ‘closed loop’ manufacturing, as well as funds for fashion designers to explore concepts such as zero-waste pattern design, luxury apparel from alternative textiles such as recycled polyethylene terephthalate and natural fibres such as nettle. A master class skills programme, delivered by leading UK and international experts, will bring together industry, academia, and higher education professionals to engage in learning and information exchanges about the circular economy. This paper presents Zero Waste Scotland’s role and the research findings.

Highlights

  • Zero Waste Scotland (ZWS) was initially a programme of the Waste Resource Action Programme UK (WRAP UK)

  • The research identified a number of initiatives, including projects producing an alternative to denim and one developing cavity wall insulation from processed natural fibres

  • This paper presents Zero Waste Scotland’s role and the research findings

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Summary

Discussion and evaluation

The ZWS-commissioned research concluded that the Scottish textile industry is innovative in key sectors, technical textiles and computer-aided design In both cases, the overarching objective is either to increase business competitiveness or improve resource efficiency, rather than closed-loop sustainability. It concluded that Scotland has a strong technical textiles sector, and there may be specialist opportunities here for closed-loop recycling solutions It recommended that the Scottish textile industry should focus on strengthening what it already does well and bolster its sustainability activities by linking to provenance, traceability, durability and quality. ZWS would like to encourage designers working in Scotland to consider supply chain sustainability and research textile design and garment construction that relates to circular economic and resource-efficient practices in design such as design for disassembly and sourcing and designing with recycled yarns such as recycled P.E.T., as well as alternative fibre and plant dying processes. The challenge will be finding suitably knowledgeable mentors in Scotland in this field

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