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市场调查报告书
商品编码
1645121
纺织品回收:市场占有率分析、产业趋势与统计、成长预测(2025-2030 年)Textile Recycling - Market Share Analysis, Industry Trends & Statistics, Growth Forecasts (2025 - 2030) |
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纺织品回收市场在 2025 年的价值预估为 53 亿美元,预计到 2030 年将达到 64 亿美元,预测期内(2025-2030 年)的复合年增长率为 3.86%。
根据产业报告显示,纺织品是欧洲消费量领域第四大环境和气候变迁压力来源。消费后纺织品和纺织废弃物的管理是欧洲面临的一大挑战。由于欧洲的再利用和回收能力有限,欧盟境内收集的大部分旧纺织品被交易并出口到非洲和亚洲,而这些地区的未来并不确定。
美国国际贸易委员会(USITC)2023年10月报告称,2021年全球服饰业占全球温室气体排放的1.8%。下游材料(纤维和纺织品)生产约占该行业总碳排放的 90%。预计该产业将大幅超过《巴黎协定》1.5°C路径规定的2030年碳排放目标。
政府政策是推动纺织废弃物管理产业的努力和创新的关键。它们反映了全球和国家在纺织废弃物管理领域促进操作化和创新的迫切需求。例如,2021年3月,英国政府启动了一项全面的废弃物预防计划,以减少纺织废弃物对环境和社会的影响,以及其他领域的影响,重点关注回收、监管、合规、永续性、增值、创新和创业等关键领域。
2023年7月,欧盟委员会发布了修订《废弃物框架指令》的策略,强调了纺织品生产商责任的新规定和减少食品废弃物的新目标。欧洲环境署表示,该提案可能使有效减少食品和纺织业的生产过剩和废弃物变得困难。
欧洲面临气候变迁和自然资源劣化的威胁。为了应对这些挑战,欧洲绿色新政旨在将欧盟转变为一个资源高效、具有竞争力的经济体,并在 2050 年实现温室气体净零排放。
欧盟委员会表示,自新冠疫情爆发以来,欧洲绿色新政已成为欧盟的生命线。欧盟下一代復苏计画和欧盟七年预算的 1.8 兆欧元(1.93 兆美元)投资中的三分之一用于资助欧洲绿色新政。
低价值的废弃物可以透过回收技术转化为新的高价值纺织品。政治压力和气候危机凸显了创新的必要性,即开发新的回收技术,将纺织废弃物用作基础材料。为了确保循环策略的有效性,您需要采购可回收的高品质材料。
苏尔寿有限公司 (Sulzer Ltd) 为该製程提供核心设备、技术和专业知识,同时为 Worn Again Technologies 提供专有溶剂技术。纺织品回收商也正在采用新技术和新製程来提高效率和效益。例如,苏尔寿和H&M成立了Worn Again Technologies,这是一种专有的纺织品回收工艺,可将纺织品转化为消费后原始材料。
2023年3月,韩国化学技术研究院开发出纺织废弃物的封闭式回收技术。 KRICT 研究团队使用一种廉价、无毒、生物分解性的材料,能够从废弃纺织品混合物中化学识别出聚酯纤维。
纺织品回收市场的竞争格局是由经验丰富的公司、新参与者和致力于永续解决方案的组织混合而成。在废弃物管理、回收和纺织品领域拥有强大影响力的公司已指定单独的部门或子公司致力于纺织品回收。此外,一些时尚品牌和零售商正在透过在其产品中加入可再生纺织品将永续性融入经营模式。公共当局和机构透过法规、奖励和资助计划来影响竞争格局,以促进永续实践和纺织品回收。纺织品回收市场的全球领导者是 WornAgain Technologies、Lenzing Group 和 Birla Cellulose。
The Textile Recycling Market size is estimated at USD 5.30 billion in 2025, and is expected to reach USD 6.40 billion by 2030, at a CAGR of 3.86% during the forecast period (2025-2030).
According to industry reports, textiles are the fourth highest source of environmental and climatic change pressure in terms of European consumption. The management of used textiles, as well as textile waste, is a major challenge for Europe. Due to the limited capacity for reuse and recycling in Europe, many used textiles collected within the EU are traded and exported to Africa and Asia, where their future is uncertain.
The US International Trade Commission (USITC) reported in October 2023 that the global apparel sector accounted for 1.8 % of global GHG emissions in 2021. The production of downstream materials (textile fibers and fabrics) accounted for about 90 % of the total sector's carbon emissions. The industry is expected to significantly exceed its carbon emissions target for 2030, which is set in the 1.5°C pathway by the Paris Agreement.
Government policies are important in driving efforts and innovation in the textile waste management industry. They are a reflection of global and national obligations that drive operationalization and technological innovation in the area of textile waste management. For example, in March 2021, the UK government launched a comprehensive Waste Prevention Program to reduce the environmental and social impact of textile waste, as well as in other sectors focused on key areas such as recycling, regulation, compliance, sustainability, value addition, innovation, and entrepreneurship.
In July 2023, the European Commission issued its strategies to revise the Waste Framework Directive, stressing new rules on the responsibility of textile producers and new targets for reducing food waste. According to the European Environmental Agency, the proposal could face difficulties effectively reducing overproduction and waste in the food and textiles sectors.
Europe faces a threat from climate change and the degradation of natural resources. To meet such challenges, the European Green Deal is set to change the EU into a resource-efficient and competitive economy, ensuring no net greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.
The European Commission says the European Green Deal has been its lifeline since the COVID-19 pandemic. One-third of the EUR 1.8 trillion (USD 1.93 trillion) investment in the Next Generation EU Recovery Plan and the EU's seven-year budget is financing the European Green Deal.
Low-value waste can be transformed into new high-value textiles by recycling technologies. The need for innovation to exploit new recycling technologies enabling textile waste to be used as a basic material is underlined by political pressures and the climate crisis. To ensure any circular strategy's effectiveness, quality materials that can be recycled must be obtained.
Sulzer Ltd, together with Worn Again Technologies' unique solvent technology, provides equipment, technology, and expertise to form the heart of the process. New technologies and processes are also being adopted by textile recyclers to enhance efficiency and effectiveness. For example, Sulzer and H&M established Worn Again Technologies, which is working on a unique textile recycling process that turns textiles into virgin raw materials at their end of use.
A technology for the closed-loop recycling of textile waste was developed in March 2023 by Korea's Korean Research Institute on Chemical Technology. The KRICT research team has adopted an inexpensive and nontoxic biodegradable material to chemically discriminate polyester from a mixture of waste fabrics.
The competitive landscape in the textile recycling market consists of a mix of experienced enterprises, new companies, and organizations working on solutions that can be sustainably implemented. Separate divisions or subsidiaries dedicated to textile recycling are designated by well-established companies in the area of waste management, recycling, and textiles. Some fashion brands and retailers also integrate sustainability into their business models by including renewable textiles in their products. Public authorities and agencies affect the competitive landscape through regulation, incentives, and funding schemes to promote sustainable practices and textile recycling. Global leaders in the textile recycling market are Worn Again Technologies, Lenzing Group, and Birla Cellulose.