Jimtex Plant Location
1022 McCormick Highway Lincolnton, GA 30817
P.O. Box 1833 Spartanburg, SC 29304 Sales Office (215) 928-1767
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6/2010 - Go Green for the Good of Your Business |
Recycling and repurposing fabric will bring the satisfaction of
doing what’s right— and boost your bottom line.
Specialty
Fabrics Review | June 2010 By Jan Brenny
Being
‘green’ is becoming a necessary part of doing business today. Operations
of all sizes and across all industries are adopting business models
that embrace sustainability and eco-friendliness. In the fabrics
industry, corporate responsibility and large retailers are two major
factors driving the movement, says Jimmy Jarrett, president and
co-founder of Martex Fiber Southern Corp., a Spartanburg, S.C., fiber
and fabric recycler. “Walmart and Target are at the forefront of
sustainability,” he says. Beyond that, from the construction to the
clothing industries, “everyone is looking for sustainable products, or
to see if there are ways to make their products more sustainably,”
Jarrett says.
New technologies and the recognition that the
fabric waste stream needs attention are also helping, says Steve
Morenberg, national sales and marketing manager for Polyfab USA in
Manhattan Beach, Calif. The company recently started a shadecloth
recycling program. “Customers are requesting it,” he says. “People want
to do better by the environment. If they have a big pile of fabric that
sits in a landfill for a couple thousand years, they don’t feel good
about that.” Exhibit responsibility
Recycling and the
environment have always been priorities for Travis Rigby, owner of
PosterGarden, a Portland, Ore.-based trade show display company.
“Everyone here feels strongly about taking care of the planet,” he says.
“All the fabric we use is made from recycled pop bottles and we don’t
use laminates. We also print directly to raw polyester film that hasn’t
been coated with any material, which improves recyclability.”
About
a year ago, Rigby started the Redeem Green program, partly because
customers were asking what to do with their old displays. PosterGarden
began offering a $25 credit toward future purchases if customers turned
in, rather than trashed, their old displays. Besides the $25 credit,
which applies for everyone, the company also pays return shipping on
displays that were purchased from PosterGarden. The company refurbishes
the displays and donates them to nonprofit groups. Unsalvageable units
are dismantled, separated into components and sent to metal, fabric and
other material recyclers.
Rigby puts local ads on Craigslist to
help get rid of some of the fabric, and shoppers come from all over the
area. “We were sort of surprised that there was so much demand,” he
says.
What Rigby does is more about satisfying customers and
doing the right thing than it is about the money. “Our employees all
take personal responsibility for our recycling program,” he says. “Many
of them actually help us build and improve our programs.” The right
thing to do
Environmental commitment and profit go hand in hand
at Portland Color, a fabric printer in Portland, Maine. Owner Andy
Graham created an environmental mission statement touting the company’s
green business practices, of which there are many. “We have a complete
and utter commitment to sustainability,” he says in the statement. “It
is simply the right thing to do.”
The business donates leftover
fabric—about 20 percent of its waste stream—to a nearby college’s
theater department for use in costuming and staging productions,
according to Paul Glynn, vice president of operations. Portland Color
also signed on with a nonprofit warehouse organization enterprise in a
nearby town that takes reuseables, such as fabric, foam board and
paper—the bulk of Portland Color’s waste. State educators pay a small
membership fee to join and can then take classroom materials for free.
Non-reuseable materials go into bins provided by a local recycler. “We
call when they’re full, and they bring us empty ones,” Glynn says.
Portland
Color was among the first companies to become certified as an
eco-friendly printer through the Sustainable Green Printing (SGP)
Partnership, a consortium of print industry groups, and that appeals to
customers. “One of the big things is that you’re using less to make
more,” he says, which helps both the business and clients save money.
“We try and design around client requirements and needs,” Glynn says,
but if there’s a greener way to ship something smarter, or print
something more cost-effectively, employees suggest options. For
instance, an item that comes in a crate the first time might come in a
tube the next.
“We can point people in a more sustainable
direction and say, ‘you can save a whole lot on shipping if you do it
this way,’” he says. “It’s been a huge hit whenever we go out and work
to present our solutions to potential clients.”
While being green
can work as a strategic marketing tool, actions speak louder than
words, says Steve Fredrickson, architectural market manager for the
Ferrari Group. The company recycles used and scrap materials through
Texyloop®, a closed loop, polyester/PVC composite recycling technology.
Fabricators
and other sources ship scrap materials to a network of approved
collection sites across Europe. These sites send the recyclables to the
Texyloop plant in Ferrare, Italy, where they’re processed into new raw
materials. Instead of being incinerated or going into a landfil, they’re
reused to make a variety of new products. Since Texyloop began in 2004,
more than 2,000 tons of used fabric have been recycled, and the program
continues to grow, Fredrickson says.
Nonetheless, taking part
can be an expensive proposition. As a result, the value can sometimes be
“probably more feel-good than economic,” he says. “But it shows that
these companies are actually helping the environment and truly making
and taking steps to be more green, as opposed to those companies who
just paint themselves green with a broad brush.” Priorities matter
While
recycling is the law for some materials, others are simply leftovers of
daily business. Faith Roberts, IFM, MFC, owner of Banner Canvas, a
marine fabricator in Ham Lake, Minn., researches to find viable
recycling alternatives for everything, whether or not required by law.
“It absolutely pays to recycle,” she says. “If you bring metal to the
scrap yard, you get paid. It may only be $20, but that buys lunch.”
The
local county has honored Roberts’ business because of its recycling
record—1.25 tons of fabric scraps, cardboard and other materials every
year. “We’re always looking for new ways and places to recycle,” she
says. Dealing with fabric is probably the hardest part because there
aren’t that many outlets and because of logistics, she says. “I try not
to throw it away if I don’t have to,” she says. She makes and sells a
line of tire covers constructed from end-bolt materials. Sometimes she
throws in covers as an “extra” or as promotional items, which engenders
good will from customers. She also makes air-conditioner covers and
donates scraps to schools.
“It’s a mind-set,” Roberts says about
recycling. “The owner of a facility has to be proactive about it and
say, ‘This is how we’re going to do things.’ It may cost on the front
side but I think there’s a moral issue. I, for one, would gladly spend
the time and money. It comes back to your belief system and doing the
right thing.”
Recycling or repurposing leftover scraps for resale
is possible, but efforts aren’t always worthwhile—especially when the
attention is drawn away from primary business operations. Although Kathy
Schaefer, owner of Glawe Awning and Tent in Fairborn, Ohio, doesn’t
have any formal recycling program in place, she has tried making sewing
bags out of leftover awning material and putting them for sale in the
showroom. She watched the price go from $15 to $10 to $7.50. “It got
annoying that they were still there,” she says. Now Schaefer just rolls
the nicer fabric pieces into a tube, puts them in a bin and sell them to
people—$5 for small pieces, $10 for large.
Television sometimes
helps her clear out those bins. “One day a couple of women came in
talking about making some crafty thing for the house that they’d seen on
HGTV, and they needed material,” Schaefer says. “That’s happened
before. A lot of the time they make cushions.”
Local city
groundskeepers, who were losing a battle with weeds, came to Schaefer
for help, giving her an especially unique repurposing opportunity. After
trying with chemicals, workers asked if Schaefer had any potential
weedblock material. She gave them 30 old awnings, which were pieced
together to nearly cover the area. “It looked like a patchwork quilt out
there,” she says.
While Schaefer believes in recycling and
repurposing leftovers, she’s careful not to let doing so interfere with
the main business. “When we have time to sew, we want to be sewing an
awning,” she says. “Still, it just kills you to throw anything away.” Being
‘a-tent-tive’
Keeping a close eye on his tent inventory helps
Rusty Parr get as much as he can out of it. That way, the owner of AV
Party Rentals, Newhall, Calif., knows when he has run out of options.
The operation disposes of 10,000 to 15,000 square feet of canvas every
year, he reports.
Parr set up an A-B-C lifespan rating system for
his tents. In general, ‘A”, or wedding appropriate, lasts about a year;
‘B,’ or festival grade, lasts about five years; and ‘C,’ or functional
grade, is anything after that. “Unless it’s torn or damaged severely, we
can usually get about eight years out of a piece of canvas as it goes
from grade to grade to grade,” he says.
Once tents do go bad,
there’s not a lot of recycling options, he says. Parr has taken older
models, still in decent shape, to a nearby tent manufacturer, who sews
drop cloths and bags for about $5 a seam. Parr offers the drop cloths to
tent-renting customers and uses the bags around the shop to store newer
canvas. Currently, he doesn’t sell the recycled items, but he’s
evaluating whether doing so might make sense in the future.
He
also sometimes sells ‘C’ grade, useable tents to companies located out
of the area. “They have to be at least a state or two away so I don’t
see the tents again,” he says. “We probably get about five cents to the
dollar on what a new tent would cost.”
Being green may not always
be easy or generate huge profits, but recycling and repurposing can
definitely be worthwhile, and the trend will continue. Fabricators can
capitalize on it and make the most of opporunities that are likely to
grow. Businesses—and the planet—can benefit.
Jan Brenny is a
freelance writer based in Bloomington, Minn.
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