Fashion
Carbios secures funding to build textile recycling plant in Longlaville
Translated by
Nazia BIBI KEENOO
Published
September 24, 2025
Carbios, the French specialist in the enzymatic recycling of plastics and synthetic fibers, has confirmed a cash position of €72 million, solidifying plans to begin construction of its first industrial plant by the end of the year. The Longlaville-based facility, located in the Lorraine region, had previously been delayed.
The project is being financed through a combination of internal funds and €42.5 million in contributions from ADEME (France’s energy transition agency) and the regional authority. Despite facing a challenging start to the year, including a redundancy plan, the company states that it is continuing to secure raw material supplies and has already begun pre-selling its upcoming production. A favorable regulatory climate further supports this progress.
“The publication on 7 September 2025 of the decree concerning the bonus for the incorporation of recycled material constitutes a powerful new lever to accelerate adoption of Carbios technology by customers, enabling them to benefit from an incentive of €1,000 per tonne for the incorporation of bio-recycled plastics derived from hard-to-recycle waste,” the company stated.
Carbios also notes that it continues to license its proprietary technology. Agreements for future deployments have already been signed with manufacturers in China, Turkey and the UK.
“Our control of spending and our cash position enable us to move forward with confidence,” said managing director Vincent Kamel. “Recent favorable developments, both on the regulatory front and in our discussions with financial and industrial partners, reinforce our trajectory. We are approaching this phase with determination and confidence, buoyed by our customers’ recognition of our technology, the solidity of our model, and the commitment of our teams.”
The future Longlaville plant will mark a key milestone for Carbios as it brings its PET (polyethylene terephthalate) enzymatic depolymerization process to an industrial scale. Once operational, the site will be capable of transforming the equivalent of 300 million T-shirts, made of at least 90% synthetic materials, or two billion colored bottles into virgin-quality PET.
Earlier this year, Carbios signed a commercial agreement to supply L’Oréal and L’Occitane en Provence with recycled plastics for use in bottles and packaging.
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Fashion
Vietnam targets GDP growth of at least 10% in 2026
The Ministry of Finance is giving the final touches to a draft resolution that lays out an initial road map to achieve these numbers.
Vietnam’s National Assembly recently approved several socio-economic targets for next year that include GDP growth of at least 10 per cent, GDP per capita of $5,400-$5,500, a rise in consumer price index of around 4.5 per cent and labour productivity gains of 8.5 per cent.
Exports are expected to rise by about 8 per cent in 2026, while retail sales of goods and services are targeted to rise by 11 per cent.
Total social investment is projected at nearly 4.93 quadrillion VND ($189 billion)—up by 18.7 per cent year on year (YoY) and equivalent to 33-33.7 per cent of GDP.
Exports are expected to rise by about 8 per cent in 2026, delivering a trade surplus of around $28 billion, while retail sales of goods and services are targeted to rise by 11 per cent, with a stretch target of 12 per cent.
Industrial hubs like Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, Hai Phong, Quang Ninh, Da Nang and Dong Nai are also chasing double-digit gains.
Less affluent provinces like Son La, Gia Lai, Dak Lak, Vinh Long, Dong Thap and Ca Mau are also targeting 8-per cent or better regional GDP growth, a domestic news agency reported.
The National Assembly has outlined 11 key task groups and solutions. The government has instructed relevant agencies to break these down into concrete, actionable plans under the resolution.
Core focuses include accelerating institutional reforms for greater transparency, consistency and equity in investment and business rules to unlock productive forces and pool resources; advancing a new growth model and economic restructuring; and ensuring timely delivery of strategic and critical infrastructure projects.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
Fashion
China’s electricity demand remains robust in November
Power use rose 6.2 per cent year on year (YoY) to 835.6 billion kilowatt-hours in November. Electricity consumption in the secondary industry increased by 4.4 per cent, reflecting stable industrial activity.
China’s electricity consumption grew steadily in November, indicating resilient economic activity, as per official data.
Power use rose 6.2 per cent YoY to 835.6 billion kilowatt-hours, with secondary industry consumption up 4.4 per cent.
Residential demand increased 9.8 per cent.
In the first eleven months, total electricity consumption climbed 5.2 per cent YoY to about 9.46 trillion kilowatt-hours.
Residential electricity uses also remained robust, rising 9.8 per cent to 105.7 billion kilowatt-hours during the month, as per Chinese media reports.
In the first eleven months of the year, China’s total electricity consumption grew 5.2 per cent YoY to approximately 9.46 trillion kilowatt-hours, pointing to sustained demand despite broader economic challenges.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (SG)
Fashion
Climate change may hit RMG export earnings of 4 nations by 2030: Study
This translates to a 22-per cent reduction in export earnings versus a climate-adaptive scenario.
The apparel industries in Vietnam, Cambodia, Pakistan and Bangladesh may lose up to $65.8 billion in export earnings by 2030 and create a million fewer jobs due to the impact of climate changes if they make no efforts to manage heat stress and higher flooding, a study revealed.
Under the no-adaptation scenario, estimates for export earnings by 2050 are 68.8 per cent lower than in the adaptation scenario.
The estimates for 2050 are even worse. With the compounding effect of slower growth under the no-adaptation scenario, estimates for export earnings are 68.8 per cent lower than in the adaptation scenario.
The analysis also predicts that in these four countries, the employment levels in a no-adaptation scenario would be 8.64 million lower in 2050 than in the adaptative scenario.
The International Labour Organization’s Better Work team offered inputs for the study.
Extreme weather is already disrupting production, delaying orders and threatening workers’ health and incomes. As heat waves and floods become more severe and frequent, worker health, productivity, job creation, and earnings are increasingly at risk, Better Work said in a release.
Despite these challenges, there is reason for optimism. Action is under way across the apparel sector. Governments are introducing and enforcing new standards on workplace heat, ventilation, rest breaks, and access to water.
Global brands are adopting voluntary standards to better manage extreme heat and flooding risks across their supply chains. Manufacturers are training workers to identify and respond to heat stress and related illnesses.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (DS)
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