tencell
Transcription
tencell
Lenzing Group Leading Fiber Innovation 1 Agenda Lenzing AG Lenzing Fiber Portfolio Enduses Fiber properties Processing Lenzing Sustainability Concept Sustainability & Environmental issues 2 Corporate Video 3 The Lenzing Group 2008 Sales: EUR 1,329.1 mill. Export share: 88% Staff: 5,945 4 The Lenzing Group 2008 Segment Fibers Business Unit Textile Fibers Business Unit Business Unit Nonwoven Fibers Business Unit Filaments Business Unit Pulp Business Unit Energy 5 Segment Plastics Sales: EUR 1,107.9 mill. EBIT: EUR 118.1 mill. Segment Engineering Business Unit Engineering Performance Products Sales: EUR 182.2 mill. EBIT: EUR 7.3 mill. Sales: (ext. sales EBIT: EUR 110,9 mill. EUR 51,3 mill.) EUR 10,0 mill. Fibers: Our core business Lenzing Group Sales by segment 100 % = EUR 1.33 bill. 6 Global network for our customers 7 Business Unit Textile Fibers in dialog with the textile chain 8 Who’s who in fibers * Lenzing fibers 9 Lenzing Fiber Brands TENCEL® - The New Age Fiber Home Textiles: quilts and bed linen Clothing: shirts, blouses, ladies‘ and men‘s wear, home wear and undergarments Lenzing Modal ® - Makes the World a Softer Place Home Textiles: terry cloth products Clothing: undergarments Lenzing FR® - The Heat Protection Fiber special fiber for flame-resistant protective clothing Lenzing Viscose® - Sets the Industry Standard Clothing made of woven textiles and knitwear 10 Lenzing brands – nonwovens fibers TENCEL® Consumer and speciality wipes for cosmetic cleansing, household and industrial applications Medical products such as wound pads, surgical swabs and components of surgical gowns Filtrations Special papers for electronic components Carbon fiber precursor Lenzing Viscose® Consumer products such as wipes for infant care Speciality wipes for cosmetic cleansing, household and industrial applications Medical products such as wound pads, surgical swabs and components of surgical gowns Tampons Viscostar ® Special fiber for tampons 11 Lenzing Modal® – the best out of beech Lenzing Modal® presentation 12 TENCEL® - New Age out of Eucalyptus TENCEL® presentation 13 Physical fibre data Cotton Viscose Modal TENCEL® 24-28 25 35 37 Elongation cond [%] 7-9 20 13 13 Tenacity wet [cN/tex] 25-30 13 20 30 rel. wet tenacity [%] 105 50 57 81 Elongation wet [%] 12-14 23 15 15 Loop tenacity [cN/tex] 20-26 7 8 20 Bisfa Modulus 10 3 6 10 Grade of fibrillation 2 1 1 4-5 Natural moisture content [%] (65 % rel F.) 8 11 11 11 3000 430 640 850 35 88 63 67 Tenacity cond [cN/tex] Polymerisation degree DPv Volume swelling in water [%] 14 Data according Lenzing specification Cross-section of Lenzing Modal® and Cotton Cotton 15 Lenzing Modal® Cross-section TENCEL® TENCEL® Heiligenkreuz 16 TENCEL® Mobile/Grimsby Cross-section of Lenzing Viscose® and Bamboo Lenzing Viscose® 17 Bamboo Viscose TENCEL® shows a nano fibrillar structure Fiber diameter 10 - 30 µm Fiber skin approx. 100 nm Macrofibrils (0,5 – 1 µm) Nanofibrils (10 - 100 nm) Microfibrils (0,1 – 0,2 µm) 18 Why TENCEL® Strength & Durability Versatility – hands and optics Function & Comfort Botanic origin 19 TENCEL® for Function & Comfort Moisture management Natural air-condition Reduced bacteria growth Sensitive skin 20 Peach Skin processing route for TENCEL® z En y tr e m e n e atm t Peach Skin second fibrillation Primary fibrillation 21 Mechanical polishing process Tumbling No pilling and fibrillation 22 Prewashing After homelaundering due Reactive dyeing to resin finish Resin finish TENCEL® LF/A100 - Control of fibrillation by chemical crosslinking reaction CROSSLINK Disruption of H-bonding allows splitting TENCEL® A100: Trifunctional TAHT crosslinker TENCEL® LF: Crosslinking agent based on anchor-chemistry of reactive dyestuffs, colourless, non toxic, free of formaldehyde 23 Fibrillation tendency of cellulose fibres No fibrillation Viscose, Modal, TENCEL® A100 TENCEL® LF Strong fibrillation Cotton Polynosic TENCEL® Fibrillation after reactive dyeing process TENCEL® A100 or LF 24 Standard TENCEL® End-uses and working procedures for TENCEL® Garment dye Denim Garment wash Standard TENCEL® Outerwear blouses, shirts, bottom weights Continue processes Open width Standard TENCEL® Hometextiles bed sheets, Inletts Discontinue processes Rope form Knitted goods 25 TENCEL® LF, TENCEL® A100 Sustainability in the Lenzing Group Lenzing sustainability concept Sustainable economic success Growth, innovation, productivity, technology leadership, quality leadership Responsibility for the environment Lenzing sets environmental standards Closed loops and integration Renewable raw material wood Responsibility for the people Attractive jobs High safety and health standards Regional support of social, sports and cultural activities 27 The Cellulose Cycle 28 91% increase of fiber production in Lenzing between 1990 and 2008 Fiber production location Lenzing [t/a] 300.000 250.000 200.000 150.000 100.000 50.000 0 9 0 99 1 99 2 99 3 99 4 99 5 99 6 99 7 99 8 99 9 000 001 002 003 004 005 006 007 00 8 00 9 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 29 Utilisation of wood in Lenzing Wood is the raw material and the fuel for pulp production in Lenzing 30 Wastewater in equivalents of habitants Reduction of Wastewater in Lenzing 31 1982 - 2009 Comparison of energy sources * incl. RVL 32 The Cellulose Cycle LCA Green Finishing Eco-Metrics 33 LCA - Life cycle analysis of fibers Comprehensive evaluation of fibers (ISO 14040 series) Utrecht University, The Netherlands (Prof. M. Patel, Li Shen) Assessment of sustainability of Lenzing fibers in comparison to cotton, polyester and polypropylene. 11 environmentally relevant factors studied Peer studies confirm results Result: Environmental load of Lenzing fibers is significantly lower than that of cotton! 34 What are the environmental impacts? • Energy: Non-Renewable Energy Use (NREU) • Global Warming (kg CO2 equivalents) • Land use for biomass production • Water use • The CML indicators (Center for Environmental studies, University Leiden / Netherlands) 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 35 abiotic depletion human toxicity fresh water ecotoxicity terrestrial ecotoxicity photochemical oxidant acidification eutrophication Net NREU (GJ/t fibre), Cradle-to-factory gate plus post-consumer waste incineration 100 80 60 78 56 34 40 26 20 Cotton 16 13 0 -20 36 l ) ) a N) 12 da pe pe tri 0 C o o o s u ,2 M ur ur S& a A i E E g U , r . . ( in el st n z (W (W c u o n n T tt PP Le l, A Te PE e Co nc e T Net GWP (t CO2 eq./t fibre), Cradle-to-factory gate plus post-consumer waste incineration 6 5.5 5 4.2 4 3.1 Cotton 3 2.1 2 1.1 1 0 0.9 -0.3 -1 ) 2 ia al N r 1 d t o 20 r &C us M , u u S A g .E U .E l, ria n ( t i e s W W z ( ( u nc on t A en T e P t , L o T l E P P C ce n Te e) p o 37 e) p ro Up to 70 % less required acreage Required acreage for the production of 1 ton of fiber 38 Up to 20 times less water consumption 39 Life cycle analysis - relative environmental load per ton of fiber soil pollution water pollution 40 Global warming Consumption of non-renewable resources Human health Soil pollution Water pollution Air pollution Ozone layer depletion Acidification of air, water and soil Eutrophication Awards VÖNIX Sustainability Index CSR Ranking Austria 2008 Eco-Label of the European Commission Responsible Care Panda-Award (WWF Austria) DIN CERTO R.I.O. Award 2006 ÖKOTEX European Environmental Award Nordic Swan 41 Green Finishing Lenzing AG in co-operation with Dystar, Huntsman, Then 42 Efficiency in Dyeing & Finishing TENCEL® is the purest cellulosic fiber with no contamination like cotton seeds, heavy metals, waxes or sulphur therefore Little or no scouring is needed in knitted fabrics No bleaching No mercerising TENCEL® shows very high dyeing efficiency allowing exceptional reduction of Dyes Salt Alkaline Water Energy usage Processing time 43 Processing route for knits Modal, TENCEL® A100/LF Washing Reactive dyeing Soaping Dewatering Softening Bleaching cotton and cotton blends Compacting 44 Stenter drying TENCEL® - dyeing efficiency Exhaust dyeing process for knits applying same amount of dye Cotton TENCEL® Cotton TENCEL® Dye bath after dyeing Dystar and Huntsman co-operation 45 Unfixed Dye removed in washing sequences TENCEL® A100 Cotton 46 Savings in dyeing and finishing *T-Shirt 100% TENCEL® A 100 ½ Dyestuff ½ Chemicals ½ Energy ½ Water **Trouser 100% TENCEL® 1/3 Dyestuff 1/2 Chemicals 1/2 Energy 1/2 Water *exhaust dyeing 47 **cold pad batch process Savings compared to 100% cotton Eco-Metrics Eco-Metrics is a tool from to evaluate the whole life cycle of a garment 48 Eco-Metrics Enable comparisons between fibres, fabrics and 49 processes Highlights areas for improvement Highlights areas for new products Provide basis for in depth analysis Eco-Metrics TENCEL® T-Shirt Cotton T-Shirt Water Fiber Yarn Fabric weight Dye Method Finish Life expectation 50 Energy Nonrenewables Pollution Water Energy Nonrenewables Pollution Environmental Cost of a Black T-shirt Fibre manufacture (based on 250g) Cotton TENCEL ® Lenzing Modal ® Water (l) 1430 66 123 Energy (MJ) 10 11 6.2 CO2 (kg) 0.75 0.52 0.22 0.52 1.52 Land Use (m2) 3.4 Figures from LCA by Patel & Chen 51 Environmental Cost of a Black T-shirt Fabric manufacture Yarn spinning – TENCEL ® has 20% less waste compared with cotton. 52 Cotton TENCEL ® Lenzing Modal ® Energy (MJ) 4.5 1.8 2.0 Water (l) 47 18 22 Chemical (g) 320 150 225 Dyestuff (g) 20 12 18 Lenzing Fibers examples - POS and Internet Tianello – natural clothing 54 Adidas 55 http://www.adidas.com/campaigns/better_place/content/ Patagonia 56 Patagonia – footprint cronicles 57
Similar documents
Geoff Collins, Lenzing, Austria Sustainable Fibres
Internationally recognised methodologies like ISO 14040 Allows comparison between fibres Lenzing fibres, cotton, polyester, polypropylene
More information