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Search Results: "By Industry : Textiles & Apparel"

 
 
Interface
United States of America Revenue: Info. not available
Goods & Services, Home Construction & Furnishings, Textiles & Apparel Employees: 20,000 and more
 
  Interface's Terratex Makes Impact - Not Imprint - on Environment  
 
Interface, a highly regarded eco-conscious company, and one of the largest manufacturers of commercial flooring in the world, has created the industry's first post-consumer recycled polyester commercial fabric. Terratex® is made from 100% recyclable or renewable material, manufactured using increasingly sustainable processes, made to meet or exceed industry standards for quality and performance, and recyclable or compostable at the end of it's useful life. Interface believes Terratex makes an impact, not an imprint, on the environment.
 
     
  QUEST Helps Interface Employees Target Waste Reduction  
 
Interface began the QUEST (Quality Utilizing Employee Suggestions and Teamwork) program in 1995 to identify, measure and eliminate waste. Since then, associates have contributed valuable suggestions to improve the efficiency of the equipment and processes. To date, the program has generated significant savings for the company. In 2001, Interface took QUEST a step further by engaging areas of the company, such as Sales, Marketing, Human Resources, that previously had not been as involved. Rather than hold each facility to generic guidelines, individual Interface facilities are encouraged to discover ways to reduce waste that are unique to them. Interface is expanding the breadth of the program and encouraging involvement and accountability at all levels of its operations.
 
     
 
 
Patagonia
United States of America Revenue: Info. not available
Consumer Services, Goods & Services, Leisure Goods & Services, Retail, Textiles & Apparel Employees: Info. not available
 
  Building and Re-building Clean and Green  
 
Patagonia defines the quality of its company by the degree to which it can reduce its impact on the environment. To that end it has celebrated the cultural histories of the communities it is located in by recycling and restoring existing structures whenever possible. From 1996-1998 the company restored two buildings - one in Reno and one in California - and became more energy efficient with the goal of demonstrating that alternatives to conventional, waste-intensive construction practices and energy generation exist and yield structures that are more sustainable and in harmony with the environment.
 
     
  Patagonia: Recycling to Keep You Warm  
 
In 1993, Patagonia adopted fleece made from post consumer recycled plastic soda bottles into its clothing product line, becoming the first outdoor clothing manufacturer to do so. Known as PCR® clothing, it created a positive step towards a more sustainable system. Today, the company uses PCR® fleece in about 31 products, and has saved some 86 million soda bottles from the trash heap and reports the addition of PCR® filament yarn to some products in its line. PCR® filament yarn contains 30-50% post-consumer feedstock and the remainder is post-industrial feedstock, allowing Patagonia to make both lining and shell out of recyclable materials.
 
     
  Quality Cotton without Compromise  
 
In 1996, Patagonia converted its entire sportswear line to 100% organically grown cotton. This decision followed the findings from an independent research company commissioned by Patagonia to give an environmental impact assessment of four major fibers. The company learned that oil-based polyester and nylon were big energy consumers and sources of pollution, but nowhere near that of cotton. They made a decision in the fall of 1994 to take the cotton sportswear 100% organic by 1996, giving the company eighteen months to make the switch for 66 products – and only four months to line up the fabric.