Brussels Proved Circularity Has Grown up; Now Industry Needs to Catch up

Textile recycling has spent years trapped between ambition and evidence, with fibre-to-fibre promises rarely translating into commercial deployment. The recent Textiles Recycling Expo in Brussels marked a shift. Automated sorting, chemical and mechanical recycling, and Digital Product Passports moved from concept to working infrastructure, forcing an uncomfortable question about who will actually buy the output.

Long Story, Cut Short
  • Textile-to-textile recycling has reached commercial viability, but weak demand and short purchasing horizons now threaten investor confidence in scaling.
  • Extended Producer Responsibility can shift the economics of circularity only if paired with design reform, collection systems and reuse recognition.
  • The reuse sector already delivers measurable circularity worldwide and cannot be sidelined as fibre-to-fibre recycling expands across regulated markets.
Decades of quiet infrastructure built around collection, grading and international redistribution now underpin any credible circular textile economy, though the sector rarely receives comparable attention in policy design.
REUSE FOUNDATION Decades of quiet infrastructure built around collection, grading and international redistribution now underpin any credible circular textile economy, though the sector rarely receives comparable attention in policy design. Textiles Recycling Expo

For years, textile recycling events have been dominated by promises, promises that fibre-to-fibre recycling was just around the corner, that legislation would create the market, and that technology would eventually solve the problem.

Walking around the Textiles Recycling Expo in Brussels this year, something felt different. For the first time, I wasn’t looking at concepts or laboratory demonstrations; I was looking at commercial reality.

The innovation on display was genuinely impressive. Automated sorting technology has advanced significantly, fibre recycling technologies continue to mature, and both chemical and mechanical recycling businesses are scaling. Artificial intelligence is improving identification and grading, while Digital Product Passports are moving from discussion towards implementation. Brands are no longer asking whether circularity matters, they are asking how quickly they can integrate it into their businesses.

As Master of Ceremonies for the exhibition and moderator of the Textile-to-Textile Recycling panel, I had the privilege of speaking with innovators, brands, recyclers, policymakers and investors from across the world. The conversations all pointed in the same direction: circularity is no longer a niche discussion; it is becoming business strategy. That should give everyone confidence.

Yet despite all the optimism, I left Brussels with one overwhelming thought. Technology is no longer our biggest challenge, demand is. For the first time, it genuinely feels as though the industry has caught up technologically. We now have companies capable of producing high-quality recycled fibres at commercial scale, automated sorting systems processing textiles with increasing speed and accuracy, and businesses investing hundreds of millions into recycling infrastructure. Innovators are proving that fibre-to-fibre recycling is not only possible but commercially achievable.

The question is no longer whether the technology works; it is whether the market is prepared to support it. That is a very different conversation. Innovation cannot survive on pilot projects forever. Demonstration plants eventually have to become profitable businesses, and investors need confidence that the products being produced today will still have buyers in five or ten years’ time. Without long-term purchasing commitments from brands, the financial case becomes increasingly difficult.

For years, the industry has focused almost entirely on supply. Now we need to focus on demand, which is why policy matters so much. Extended Producer Responsibility, if designed properly, has the potential to become one of the most important interventions our industry has ever seen, not because it creates another compliance obligation, but because eco-modulated fees can begin rewarding better product design, supporting collection, reuse and recycling infrastructure, and creating the confidence businesses need to invest.

Where Policy Meets Its Limits

However, EPR is not a silver bullet. Too often, our industry searches for a single solution when the reality is far more complex. EPR without better product design will simply create more difficult material to manage. Mandatory recycled content without investment in collection and sorting infrastructure risks creating demand that cannot be fulfilled. Digital Product Passports without accurate data merely digitise existing problems, and recycling targets without recognising reuse risk undermining the very activity that delivers the greatest environmental benefit. These policies cannot operate independently; they need to complement one another if they are to deliver genuine circularity rather than simply shifting responsibility around the value chain.

One issue that received surprisingly little attention during some discussions is the continuing importance of the global reuse market. There remains a tendency in some policy circles to speak as though fibre-to-fibre recycling will eventually replace reuse. It won’t, nor should it. The hierarchy exists for a reason. Keeping clothing in use for as long as possible will always deliver greater environmental benefit than breaking it down and manufacturing something new.

The reuse and recycling sector has quietly been delivering circularity for decades. Long before the circular economy became fashionable, our industry was collecting, grading, repairing, redistributing and extending the life of millions of garments every year. It has built sophisticated international supply chains, created hundreds of thousands of livelihoods globally and prevented countless tonnes of clothing from becoming waste. That knowledge should not be overlooked simply because newer technologies have entered the conversation. In many ways, the existing reuse sector represents the foundation upon which future circularity will be built.

If governments genuinely want successful textile circularity, they need to support what already works whilst investing in what comes next. It is not a choice between reuse and recycling, we need both.

Perhaps the strongest message to emerge from Brussels was the growing recognition that collaboration is no longer optional. No single stakeholder can address these challenges in isolation. Brands, recyclers, collectors, charities and governments each have a role to play. Longterm purchasing commitments support infrastructure investment, improving product quality benefits collectors, sustainable partnerships strengthen the charitable sector and effective regulation depends on a clear understanding of how the supply chain operates.

Collaboration is no longer a nice idea. It has become an economic necessity.

One area that particularly encouraged me was the growing recognition of reuse within wider circular economy discussions. For too long, the conversation has focused almost exclusively on recycling.

Where Circularity Stands
  • Automated sorting technology has advanced to commercial-scale deployment, processing textiles faster and with improved material identification accuracy.
  • Chemical and mechanical recycling businesses are scaling, with hundreds of millions invested into new processing infrastructure across regions.
  • Artificial intelligence tools are strengthening fibre identification and grading, reducing contamination in recycled output streams.
  • Digital Product Passports have moved from policy discussion towards implementation, though data accuracy remains a concern for stakeholders.
  • Brands have shifted from questioning circularity to asking how quickly they can integrate it into procurement decisions.
What Policy Must Fix
  • Extended Producer Responsibility risks failure if introduced without parallel investment in collection and sorting infrastructure across member states.
  • Mandatory recycled content targets without supply chain readiness create demand that cannot be fulfilled by current processing capacity.
  • Digital Product Passports lacking verified input data merely digitise existing problems and entrench inaccurate material information system-wide.
  • Recycling-only targets ignore reuse, undermining the activity that delivers the greatest environmental benefit per garment handled.
  • Eco-modulated fees, if properly designed, can reward better product design and de-risk long-term recycling investment decisions.
Rising production of low-quality garments with limited second-life potential now sits awkwardly against sector claims of circular progress, and the tension is becoming harder for regulators and brands to ignore.
VOLUME CONTRADICTION Rising production of low-quality garments with limited second-life potential now sits awkwardly against sector claims of circular progress, and the tension is becoming harder for regulators and brands to ignore. Textiles Recycling Expo

The Quiet Work of Reuse

Recycling remains essential, but we should never forget that the greatest environmental benefit comes from extending the life of clothing in the first place.

The reuse and recycling sector has quietly been delivering circularity for decades.

Long before circular economy became fashionable, our industry was collecting, grading, repairing, redistributing, and creating employment across global markets.

If governments and brands genuinely want a circular textile system, they need to bring the reuse sector into the centre of policy discussions rather than treating it as an afterthought.

Every part of the value chain depends upon every other part, and that interdependence has never been clearer. The businesses that will succeed over the next decade are unlikely to be those with the biggest marketing budgets; they will be those capable of forming genuine long-term partnerships across the entire value chain.

Another issue that deserves greater attention is product design. The industry continues to produce increasing volumes of clothing that is harder to repair, harder to sort and harder to recycle. Mixed fibres, complex trims, bonded materials and rapidly declining garment quality all increase processing costs long before recycling even becomes an option. The circular economy does not begin at the recycling plant, it begins at the designer’s desk.

Every design decision has consequences further down the supply chain. Those consequences are often invisible to consumers, but they are experienced every day by collectors, sorters, graders, recyclers and ultimately the markets that rely on good quality reusable clothing. This is why commercial reality has to replace good intentions. The industry cannot continue celebrating circularity whilst simultaneously increasing production volumes of products that have little prospect of a meaningful second life. That contradiction is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.

Perhaps the biggest lesson from Brussels was that optimism has finally returned, not the optimism built on ambitious presentations or aspirational roadmaps, but real optimism based on investment, engineering, commercial partnerships and businesses that are actively building the infrastructure we have spent years talking about.

The challenges remain enormous. Ultra-fast fashion continues to place unprecedented pressure on collection systems, global reuse markets continue to experience economic and political uncertainty, processing costs continue to rise, investment remains difficult, and legislative uncertainty still creates hesitation. None of these challenges disappear overnight.

But for the first time in several years, it genuinely feels as though the industry is beginning to move together rather than pulling in different directions. That matters, because circularity will never be achieved through technology alone. It will be built through trust, collaboration, sensible regulation, long-term commercial commitment, and recognising that reuse and recycling are complementary rather than competing solutions.

Most importantly, it will be built by accepting that there is no single technology, no single business, and no single piece of legislation capable of solving the textile industry’s challenges on its own. Brussels demonstrated that the innovation exists, the investment is beginning to follow, and the legislation is gathering pace. Now the industry must match that progress with commercial courage.

Because the future of circular textiles will not be decided by what we can build, it will be decided by what we choose to support. Brussels showed us what is possible.

Now the real work begins.

Perhaps the biggest lesson from Brussels was that optimism has finally returned, not the optimism built on ambitious presentations or aspirational roadmaps, but real optimism based on investment, engineering, commercial partnerships and businesses that are actively building the infrastructure we have spent years talking about.

 
 
 
Dated posted: 14 July 2026 Last modified: 14 July 2026