Puma will be launching a collection of shoes, apparel and accessories
that are either biodegradable or recyclable when consumers return them
to Puma’s Bring Me Back Program at the end of their lifecycles. With the
Puma InCycle collection, coming into stores in Spring/ Summer 2013,
Puma takes a first step in addressing the environmental footprint of its
consumers’ disposal, helping them to reduce their personal waste
generation.
“While we have already implemented numerous initiatives to reduce
Puma’s footprint on our mission to become the most desirable and
sustainable Sportlifestyle company, the Puma InCycle collection is the
first step to help reduce the amounts of garbage that consumer products
cause at the end of their lives,” said Franz Koch, CEO of Puma. “We feel
that we are responsible for the environmental impact our products cause
and this innovative concept in sustainability is a first step towards
our long-term vision of using innovative materials and design concepts
for Puma products that can be recycled in technical processes or
composted in biological cycles.”
Puma is taking on the challenge
of launching an entire line that is either biodegradable or recyclable
and 100% Cradle-to-Cradle Basic certifiedCM. The Puma InCycle collection
includes among numerous others the lifestyle sneaker Basket
(biodegradable), the legendary Puma Track Jacket (recyclable), shirts
(biodegradable) and a backpack (recyclable). After Puma’s 2010
Environmental Profit and Loss Account (E P&L) revealed that 57% of
Puma’s environmental impacts are associated with the production of raw
materials such as leather, cotton and rubber, the company aimed at
increasing the number of products made of more sustainable materials. So
only clever raw materials have been used to manufacture this
collection: Puma InCycle uses among others biodegradable polymers,
recycled polyester and organic cotton in order to eliminate pesticides,
chemical fertilizers and other hazardous chemicals.
Puma
simultaneously launched its new Product E P&L that analyzed and
assessed the environmental impacts of two Puma InCycle products with two
conventional Puma products. The analysis brought to light that the Puma
InCycle Basket and a Puma InCycle shirt impact the environment 31% less
than a conventional product. Furthermore it revealed that it takes 31
trucks with a load capacity of 13,000 kg to clear the waste that 100,000
pairs of conventional Puma Suede sneakers cause during the production
process and consumer life until they end up on landfills or in
incinerators. In comparison, 12 trucks are needed to clear the waste
that 100,000 pairs of biodegradable Puma InCycle Baskets cause until
they end up in an industrial composting facility system. For more
information on Puma’s Product E P&L, please refer to
www.about.Puma.com/press.
The Recyclable InCycle Products
Recycling
means that used materials – which normally end up in conventional
disposal such as landfills and incineration plants – will be processed
into new materials. Alternative waste disposal, such as recycling uses
less energy compared to raw material manufacturing, reduces air
pollution from waste incineration and land use from landfilling.
Recycling requires energy as well, but far less on average than raw
material creation. A precondition for products to be recyclable is that
the materials within the product are not blended with other materials.
This homogeneity is necessary because mixed or composite materials
constrain separation during the recycling process and pure recycled
materials cannot be obtained. Puma’s recyclable InCycle products, such
as the Puma Track Jacket and the Backpack, have been created just using
homogenous materials to ensure they are fully recyclable at the end of
their lifecycles.
The recyclable Puma Track Jacket, for example,
is 98% made of recycled polyester deriving from used PET bottles while
the conventional Puma Track Jacket contains additional materials, such
as elastane. To fully ensure the homogeneity of materials, the
recyclable jacket’s zipper was made of recycled polyester as well. The
InCycle Puma Track jacket, once it has been returned by the consumer and
collected through Puma’s Bring Me Back program, can be turned back into
polyester granulate which then serves as a secondary raw material for
other products made of recycled polyester, reducing the need for crude
oil, energy and the amount of waste created.
The Puma Backpack is
made of polypropylene and will be returned to the original manufacturer
in China after collection, who will then produce new backpacks from the
recycled polypropylene.
Recycling requires that the consumer
understands the concept and how their individual behaviour can help to
support the process. Likewise Puma is doing its share by disposing of
all collected products responsibly.
Biodegradable Products
A
precondition for products to be biodegradable is that they must be only
made of biodegradable materials including organic fibers without any
toxic chemicals and have to follow certain international standards for
composting. This ensures that already the sourcing and manufacturing
process of biodegradable Puma products creates the least environmental
impact possible. The upper of Puma’s biodegradable lifestyle sneaker
“Basket” is made of a mix of organic cotton and linen while the sole is
composed of the biodegradable plastic APINATbio©, a new material
innovation which is biodegradable when disposed correctly. When
collected through Puma’s Bring Me Back Program, shredded and transported
to an industrial composting facility system, the materials of the
Basket compost into natural humus and become part of the ecosystem
again.
All products of the Puma InCycle collection are
Cradle-to-Cradle Basic certifiedCM, being the first collection of
footwear, apparel and accessories to carry this certification. The aim
of the Cradle-to-Cradle® design concept is to have an improved consumer
quality for the user, pose no health risk for anyone who comes into
contact with them and deliver both economic and ecological benefits.
“It
is such a great accomplishment to see Puma taking the initiative, and
leading their company towards developing products that generate a
beneficial footprint”, said Prof. Dr. Michael Braungart, Founder of EPEA
Internationale Umweltforschung GmbH. “Their line of sports and
lifestyle products are truly designed based on the Cradle to Cradle®
design principles. Their new collection, along with their cooperation
with I:CO and their Bring Me Back system, put them at the forefront of
holistic beauty, innovation, and quality.”
( Source Puma )
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