What are the specific challenges of applying this technology to textiles, and how has Carbios addressed them?
Alain Martin: Textiles are far more complex than PET bottles due to their diverse material blends, dyeing processes, and other chemical treatments. These factors introduce unique challenges in breaking down PET while leaving other materials intact.
To address this, we partnered with major brands like Patagonia, Puma, and Salomon to test our technology on real-world textile waste. These collaborations allowed us to refine our process using post-industrial textile samples that represent the market’s diversity. For example, we used 11 different textile samples to produce our first biorecycled T-shirt, demonstrating the robustness and versatility of our process.
Scaling up innovative technologies is often a bottleneck. How has Carbios managed this transition?
Alain Martin: Scaling from laboratory to industrial production is always a critical challenge for new technologies. At Carbios, we have successfully scaled our enzymatic process in three stages: lab-scale, pilot-scale, and now demonstration-scale.
Our demonstration plant in France can process up to two tons of PET waste per batch—equivalent to approximately 100,000 bottles or 20,000 T-shirts. What’s remarkable is that the kinetics of the enzymatic reaction remain consistent regardless of reactor size. This scalability makes it relatively straightforward to integrate our process into industrial settings.
We are now building our first full-scale industrial plant in northeastern France. With a reactor capacity of 350 cubic meters, this plant will be capable of processing 50,000 tons of PET waste annually.