
Fashion brand Mango partners with Circulose to boost circular fashion
Through this partnership, Mango will adopt fibres produced using CIRCULOSE pulp, which is made from cotton waste recycled in a chemical process. The goal is to incorporate this innovative material into its product collections ensuring full transparency and traceability throughout the supply chain.
Mango partners with Circulose, becoming the first brand to use its recycled cotton-based fibres since the company's restart. This marks a key step in Mango's strategy to adopt a circular production model and reduce its environmental impact. The collaboration reinforces Mango's long-term commitment to sustainable fashion and innovation in textile recycling.
'This collaboration marks a step on our sustainability roadmap as we strive to exclusively use fibres with lower environmental impact by 2030 and reflects our commitment to fostering a more circular and responsible fashion ecosystem, where innovation and environmental stewardship go hand in hand.' affirms Mango's Sustainability and Sourcing Director, Andrés Fernández . 'We are excited to lead the way in transforming the fashion landscape and inspiring others to join us. After launching Re-Viste in Spain to assist consumers in giving their garments a second life, we are now committed to advancing recycling through our partnership with Circulose.'
'We're proud to welcome Mango as a Circularity Scaling Partner and inspired by the brand's bold ambitions' says Jonatan Janmark, CEO of Circulose . 'As part of our new strategy to deliver a full circularity solution with expanded services for committed brands, we're excited to work closely with Mango to efficiently integrate CIRCULOSE at scale into its supply chain.'
CIRCULOSE is a regenerated material made from 100% discarded cotton-rich textiles that replaces the use of virgin materials such as wood pulp or cotton and helps to close the loop on textile production while maintaining high standards of quality and design CIRCULOSE is a 'dissolving pulp' that can be used to make viscose, lyocell, modal, acetate, and other types of regenerated fibres which are then spun into yarns, woven or knitted into fabrics and finally cut and sewn into new high-quality textile products.
Mango's partnership with Circulose is part of the company's sustainability strategy until 2030, whose goals include fostering innovation and the use of lower impact materials, moving towards a circular textile industry, decarbonising the supply chain, and preserving worker wellbeing across the value chain.
Circularity at Mango
The commitment to include more sustainable fibres and more responsible processes is a key strategic pillar of Mango's value proposal. The company's sustainability strategy aims to transition towards a circular model, based on materials with a lower environmental impact and designs conceived under circularity criteria, promoting recyclability, focusing on durability or reusing patterns that result in a lower volume of waste.
In early 2023, Mango launched its first denim collection designed using circularity criteria to allow the reuse and recycling of its garments after their useful life and, thus, promoting a second life for the product. That same year, celebrating World Ocean Day, Mango also joined forces with Pyratex, a Spanish textile supplier that specialises in innovative fabrics, to market a solidarity outfit made from a mixture of seaweed, wood cellulose and cotton.
In addition, Mango, along with other major brands, created the Association for Textile and Footwear Waste Management, a pioneering project that positions Spain as a leader in the circular management of textile and footwear waste. Last year the organization, under the name Re-Viste, launched a pilot project which will test selective collection and recycling models in six representative municipalities in Spain with the aim to establish an efficient system that promotes reuse and recycling.
In 2024, Mango also used cotton originating from regenerative agriculture in its products through a partnership with British-Indian company Materra and by the end of the year, almost 30% of Mango's garments were designed adopting circular criteria. Note: The headline, insights, and image of this press release may have been refined by the Fibre2Fashion staff; the rest of the content remains unchanged.
Fibre2Fashion News Desk (RM)

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