UKRI Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Centre for Textiles: Circular Bioeconomy for Textile Materials

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Title
UKRI Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Centre for Textiles: Circular Bioeconomy for Textile Materials

CoPED ID
cf668943-f99a-4735-8a78-2fa4b2bf2a41

Status
Active

Funders

Value
£8,873,754

Start Date
Jan. 1, 2021

End Date
Dec. 31, 2024

Description

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The current global fashion supply chain is characterised by its lack of transparency, forced labour, poor working conditions, unequal power relationships and overproduction caused by fast fashion. Lacking ethics, the global fashion supply chain is also highly polluting. The total footprint of clothing in use in the UK, including global and territorial emissions, was 26.2 million tonnes CO2 in 2016, up from 24 million tonnes in 2012 (equivalent to over a third of household transport emissions).

The Textiles Circularity Centre (TCC) proposes materials security for the UK by circularising resource flows of textiles. This will stimulate innovation and economic growth in the UK textile manufacturing, SME apparel and creative technology sectors, whilst reducing reliance on imported and environmentally and ethically impactful materials, and diversifying supply chains. The TCC will provide underpinning research understanding to enable the transition to a more circular economy that supports the brand 'designed and made in the UK'. To enact this vision, we will catalyse growth in the fashion and textiles sector by supporting the SME fashion-apparel community with innovations in materials and product manufacturing, access to circular materials through supply chain design, and consumer experiences.

Central to our approach is to enable consumers to be agents of change by engaging them in new cultures of consumption. We will effect a symbiosis between novel materials manufacturing and agentive consumer experiences through a supply chain design comprised of innovative business models and digital tools.

Using lab-proven biotechnology, we will transform bio-based waste-derived feedstock (post-consumer textiles, crop residues, municipal solid waste) into renewable polymers, fibres and flexible textile materials, as part of a CE transition strategy to replace imported cotton, wood pulp and synthetic polyester fibres and petrochemical finishes.

We will innovate advanced manufacturing techniques that link biorefining of organic waste, 3D weaving, robotics and additive manufacturing to circular design and produce flexible continuous textiles and three-dimensional textile forms for apparel products. These techniques will enable manufacturing hubs to be located on the high street or in local communities, and will support SME apparel brands and retailers to offer on-site/on-demand manufacture of products for local customisation. These hubs would generate regional cultural and social benefits through business and related skills development.

We will design a transparent supply chain for these textiles through industrial symbiosis between waste management, farming, bio-refinery, textile production, SME apparel brands, and consumer stakeholders. Apparel brands will access this supply chain through our digital 'Biomaterials Platform', through which they can access the materials and data on their provenance, properties, circularity, and life cycle extension strategies.

Working with SME apparel brands, we will develop an in-store Configurator and novel affective and creative technologies to engage consumers in digitally immersive experiences and services that amplify couplings between the resource flow, human well being and satisfaction, thus creating a new culture of consumption. This dematerialisation approach will necessitate innovation in business models that add value to the apparel, in order to counter overproduction and detachment. Consumers will become key nodes in the circular value chain, enabling responsible and personalised engagement.

As a human-centred design led centre, TCC is uniquely placed to generate these innovations that will catalyse significant business and skills growth in UK textile manufacturing, SME fashion-apparel, and creative technology sectors, and drastically reduce waste and carbon emissions, and environmental and ethical impacts for the textiles sector.

Sharon Baurley PI_PER
Phil Purnell COI_PER
Marianna Obrist COI_PER
Aikaterini Fotopoulou COI_PER
Prasad Potluri COI_PER
Paulo Jorge Bartolo COI_PER
Sameer Rahatekar COI_PER
Youngjun Cho COI_PER
Nadia Berthouze COI_PER
Eleanor Dare COI_PER
Simon McQueen-Mason COI_PER
Steve Evans COI_PER
Carey Jewitt COI_PER
Miriam Ribul COI_PER
Bruna Petreca COI_PER
Ali Asadipour COI_PER
Vivek Koncherry RESEARCH_PER
Alexandra Lanot RESEARCH_COI_PER
Gareth Loudon COI_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Supply chains
  2. Textiles
  3. Innovations
  4. Sustainable development
  5. Recycling
  6. Textile industry
  7. Clothing industry
  8. Fibres
  9. Product development
  10. Production
  11. Circular economy
  12. Products
  13. Materials (matter)
  14. Green products
  15. Apparel
  16. Ecological character
  17. Clothes
  18. Consumers
  19. Ethics
  20. Brands

Extracted key phrases
  1. UKRI Interdisciplinary Circular Economy Centre
  2. Current global fashion supply chain
  3. UK textile manufacturing
  4. Circular Bioeconomy
  5. Flexible textile material
  6. Consumer textile
  7. Supply chain design
  8. Textile sector
  9. Flexible continuous textile
  10. Dimensional textile form
  11. Textile production
  12. Transparent supply chain
  13. SME apparel brand
  14. Textiles Circularity Centre
  15. Circular value chain

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations