Nyhed
STREP Project Aims to Improve Fiber-to-Fiber Textile Recycling Across Europe
Lagt online: 19.06.2025

Nyhed
STREP Project Aims to Improve Fiber-to-Fiber Textile Recycling Across Europe
Lagt online: 19.06.2025

STREP Project Aims to Improve Fiber-to-Fiber Textile Recycling Across Europe
Nyhed
Lagt online: 19.06.2025
Nyhed
Lagt online: 19.06.2025
By Astrid Helene Mortensen, AAU Communication and Public Affairs
Photo: STREP
As concerns about textile waste and sustainability grow, a new EU-funded initiative, STREP (Streamlined Textile Waste Streams for Recycling Optimization) is stepping up to transform the European clothing and household fabrics sector.
Textile consumption in Europe places one of the greatest pressures on the environment, largely due to resource-intensive production and low recycling rates. STREP tackles this problem at the root by developing cutting-edge tools and systems to make textile recycling more efficient, circular, and scalable.
Led by Aalborg University, the STREP project brings together 13 partners across 8 countries, including universities, tech companies, recyclers, and design specialists. With a €5 million budget, the consortium will develop smarter sorting systems, recyclable-by-design guidelines, and advanced recycling methods - all tested through real-world pilot projects.
“STREP gives us the chance to explore the full circular textile value chain - beyond just collection - and develop real, scalable solutions for a sustainable future,” says Iskra Dukovska-Popovska, Associate Professor at Aalborg University
All technologies will be tested in five pilot sites across Europe, ensuring solutions are practical and adaptable. An iterative “Assess-Review” development cycle - involving recyclers, manufacturers, and designers - will help optimize the processes to actual value chain actors’ needs.
STREP aims to increase textile recycling by 25% within three years, reduce energy use by 30%, and improve material circularity across the EU. At least 10 major textile manufacturers and 20% of EU recyclers are expected to adopt its solutions. The project also targets policy influence, contributing to EU sustainability regulations like the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR).
STREP is designed for everyone in the textile value chain - from manufacturers and recyclers to researchers, policymakers, and consumers. By turning waste into value, it supports greener products, stronger industries, and a more circular economy.
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