Spotted: The World Economic Forum’s (WEF) Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP) brings together more than 400 member organisations to build a circular economy and replace single-use plastics. With time running out for us to make the necessary changes to our damaging reliance on plastics, advocates for change continue to emphasise the multi-faceted approach needed to build a solution. Organisations in every sector must work creatively and quickly to reduce their use of virgin, and any, plastic.
In Australia, fashion brand Aciae works to the Circle to Zero principle that strives to eliminate waste from every step of its production processes and contribute to the overall reduction of global plastic pollution. The company’s name is Latin for thread and refers to its practice of turning single-use plastic waste into the thread that’s used to create its machine-washable, waterproof, recyclable shoes. Gathered plastics are cleaned, shredded, and then melted down for extrusion. The extruded fibres are then spun into thread, completing the transformation of trash into fabric.
Aciae works with a number of organisations to source its plastic-based threads, including Repreve Our Ocean, for a line of designs that uses ocean-bound plastics. Aciae’s shoes come in a range of styles and colours, all of which are machine-washable and fully recyclable at the end of their life. That circularity helps Aciae close its production loop and make strides towards its goal of achieving zero carbon emissions by 2030.
As well as providing the fashion industry with an example of ways of working that reduce waste, Aciae also turns a global scourge into something useful while lessening reliance on virgin materials. The brand highlights design for durability, repair, and disassembly by making recycling at a product’s end-of-life an integral part of the initial creation of each pair of shoes. As part of the Australian Fashion Council, Aciae is helping guide the Council’s Seamless Stewardship programme, which seeks to reduce the country’s volume of clothing waste.
Springwise’s library also showcases other methods of using recycled plastics for new products such as home construction materials and eyewear.
Spotted: Seafood is the world’s largest traded food commodity, with more than 3 billion people relying on it as an important source of protein. Conventional seafood production, however, has a big impact on the environment, with overfishing and pollution proving extremely harmful to global marine ecosystems. Now, one company is hoping to regenerate the seafood supply chain by creating a sustainable seafood delivery service.
Inspired by the principles of the Slow Food movement, the founders of Seatopia are cultivating a more environmentally friendly and transparent supply chain, partnering with artisan aquaculture farms. The company then delivers high-quality, sustainably farmed seafood from these trusted farms to customers’ doorstep. The sushi-grade fish can either be eaten raw or cooked, depending on the customer’s preference.
Orders arrive in 100 per cent compostable insulated boxes packed with dry ice. Seatopia’s vacuum seal freezer bags, labels, gel packs, boxes, cardboard, and packing tape are made using bio-based resins – and are also recyclable or compostable.
Seatopia wants to ensure it has a net positive impact on our oceans, while providing its members with delicious seafood. As such, it only sources from farms that raise fish from non-GMO eggs, using feed like sustainable microalgae-based oils and mycelium proteins. The fish are also all raised in lightly populated environments free from antibiotics.
As well as supporting regenerative aquacultural practices that reduce strain on wild fish populations, Seatopia also supports important environmental initiatives, like the Seaforestation project, which plants kelp in degraded marine ecosystems to improve carbon sequestration and provide essential habitats and food sources for ocean life.
Like many areas in the food industry, seafood cultivation is not short of environmental problems. Springwise has spotted many innovations looking to improve it, however, including artificial intelligence (AI) that could transform fishing and the use of zooplankton as a sustainable aquaculture feed.
A grape-based leather alternative and sequins made from tree cellulose are among 15 material innovations on show as part of fashion house Stella McCartney’s exhibition at the COP28 climate conference.
In partnership with Stella McCartney‘s parent company LVMH, the Sustainable Market showcases “the possibilities of current cutting-edge or soon-to-be available technologies” that could transform the fashion industry.
The 15 chosen innovators range from start-ups to established brands, providing plant-based alternatives to plastic, animal leather and fur as well as regenerative alternatives to traditional fibres.
“The fashion industry accounts for eight per cent of global greenhouse gas emissions,” McCartney said. “We need to get creative and innovative with alternatives, moving beyond the limited materials that the industry has been working with traditionally.”
“If we can work collaboratively with these goals, we can actually begin doing business in a way that regenerates our planet instead of only taking from it.”
Among the featured companies is Radiant Matter, which produces plastic-free iridescent BioSequins, and Mango Materials, which transforms captured methane emissions into plastic as seen in Allbirds’ Moonshot trainers.
US start-up Natural Fiber Welding is presenting its plant-based leather alternative Mirum, which has already been used across Stella McCartney’s Falabella and Frayme bags as well as a series of fragrance-infused jackets by MCQ.
The Sustainable Market also showcases examples of finished products including crochet dresses and bags by Stella McCartney that are made using seaweed-based Kelsun yarn and the first-ever garment crafted from biologically recycled polyester by US company Protein Evolution.
Another stall highlights Stella McCartney’s collaboration with Veuve Clicquot to develop a grape-based leather using waste from the champagne house’s harvest.
The Sustainable Market also highlights three student projects from the Maison/0 incubator at design school Central Saint Martins, which is supported by LVMH.
Automating Violacein by Charlotte Werth explores how an automated microbial dye process can be used to produce printed patterns for luxury textiles.
Other projects examine how bacteria, algae and food waste could offer bio-based alternatives to synthetic dyes, and how lab-grown keratin fibres could be used for luxury clothing.
The products are displayed in market stalls featuring 3D-printed walls infused with a compound by Spanish materials company Pure Tech, which it claims can remove CO2 and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) from the air by converting them into harmless mineral particles.
Other brands invited to participate in the market include US company Brimstone, which claims to have created “the world’s first carbon-negative portland cement”, and Chargeurs Luxury Fibers, which produces wool using regenerative farming methods.
McCartney was asked to represent the fashion industry at COP28 to advocate for policy and regulatory change to incentivise sustainable business and the decarbonisation of the industry.
Her delegation also seeks to promote human and animal welfare while building a coalition of global government and business leaders to scale investment in material innovations.
Recently named among Time magazine’s 100 most influential climate leaders, McCartney bills her eponymous brand as the world’s first luxury fashion house to never use animal leather, feathers, fur or skins.
The Sustainable Market concept was first launched as part of her Summer 2024 runway show during Paris Fashion Week and will continue to evolve over the coming year following COP28.
The exhibition is taking place at the climate conference until 12 December in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Last year’s Conference of the Parties (COP), which was held in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt, saw architect Norman Foster launch a set of sustainability principles for architects while a team of researchers developed an app that predicts damage to global cities from rising sea levels.
The event was described as “deeply depressing” by architect and engineer Smith Mordak in their opinion piece for Dezeen, with other architects and sustainability experts expressing frustration at the slow pace of global action to reduce carbon emissions.
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Front porch living is a staple activity in many parts of the world; this culture of chatting with passersby, catching a fresh breeze and watching over the neighborhood was long viewed as a cultural mainstay of the southern United States. In addition to contributing to more socially-oriented communities, porches were historically important design features to help inhabitants cope with warmer weather (and a signature element of the New Urbanism movement). As the advent of air conditioning revolutionized the way architects and the broader population alike responded to heat, the porch became less integral to home design; however, today, several firms are making a strong case for its revival.
Architects have a responsibility to protect the public’s health, safety and welfare. Between climate change and increasingly extreme weather conditions, this charge also encompasses more sustainable and resilient design. For the Kendeda Building in Atlanta, the team at The Miller Hull Partnership (who took home the jury accolade for Best Sustainable Firm in the 10th Annual A+Awards) set out to create a model architecture that could foster environmental education and research. The resulting building doubles as a forum for community outreach, grounding approaches to sustainability and resiliency within the campus and beyond — all hinging on a clever evolution of the “porch” concept.
Located in the heart of Atlanta, The Kendeda Building was designed to make a statement. Created for the Georgia Institute of Technology, the building’s design also became an expression of its value system. These ideas are shown on display both inside and out, from the massing to material choices like mass timber. Working with Lord Aeck Sargent, a Katerra Company (LAS), the team at Miller Hull wanted to demonstrate that rigorous design and sustainability go hand-in-hand.
The concept of The Kendeda Building is inspired by the vernacular southern porch. Taking this element and expanding it from the residential to the civic scale, the team imagined a “regenerative porch” that could create a cool microclimate on the surrounding site. The resulting structure invites visitors inside to rest, learn and to look up as they learn about the space around them. Inside, the building continues the concept of learning by example through the design itself. As the team explained, gravity and lateral elements are left exposed creating a visual register of the structural forces at work.
The Kendeda Building hosts a variety of learning spaces to welcome all students and disciplines from campus. Traditional classrooms as well as laboratory space and meeting rooms fill the building. Each space has generous daylighting, operable windows and is free of Red List chemicals. Indoor environmental quality was the primary driver in the design of these spaces to support learning. The Kendeda Building is Georgia Tech’s first timber building since its earliest load bearing masonry and timber structures from the 1880s. Climate smart mass timber was selected for its significantly smaller embodied carbon footprint, compared to concrete and steel systems.
The design of the Kendeda Building demonstrates that ‘Living Buildings’ are possible in even the most demanding climates. The Living Building Challenge is one of the world’s most rigorous performance sustainability certification standards for buildings. It was assumed Living Buildings could never be built in the hot and humid climate of the southern United States, especially Georgia, where swampy summers typically necessitate the use of high amounts of energy to keep buildings cool.
“People thought that a building like Kendeda could work in other places – California. Arizona, maybe. But certainly not Georgia,” says Shan Arora, Director of the Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design.
Yet, the project achieved full Living Building Certification in 2021 after proving its net positive energy and water performance during its year-long occupancy period. At the heart of this was the “Regenerative Porch” — a structural system and PV canopy that generates more than 100% of the building’s energy demand and captures enough rainwater to meet 100% of the water used in the building. At the same time, the design blurs interior and exterior conditions while providing weather-protected outdoor classroom space. As the first Living Building of its kind in the Southeast US, the project set a new standard for design.
The Kendeda Fund provided ongoing funding to support programs in the building that engage local Atlanta communities beyond the university. The atrium, lecture hall, roof garden, and multipurpose room were all designed to be made available for community events. As the team outlined, Georgia Tech’s mission is to maximize the impact of the building by exposing as many students as possible to the project. After learning in a building expressing such a strong position on resiliency and sustainability, the hope is that they will take those values with them into the future.
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Too much talking, not enough action – Alessandro Armillotta, CEO of the sustainability app AWorld, is heading to COP28 with a clear message. He believes that an ‘intention-behaviour gap’ in society is stalling progress on net-zero goals, but with a bit of tech-enabled encouragement on a personal or professional level, we can all make a difference through everyday actions.
Choose public transport when you can, air dry your laundry, eat a vegetarian meal once a week… There is a host of small actions we could take that would contribute to a lower carbon footprint if we did them consistently, but not enough people are doing them. A recent study by the American Psychological Association, for example, showed that 7 in 10 Americans wish they could do more about climate change, but over half do not know where to start, citing time, money, and skills as blockers.
“We live as though our resources are infinite because we fail to see the impact of our daily actions and sustainability feels complicated,” says Alessandro. “My focus is to try and close the ‘intention-behaviour gap’ – the discrepancy between what consumers say and what they actually do.”
He doesn’t blame people. “Today’s culture doesn’t incentivise living sustainably,” he says. “At COP28, I will have meetings with an ecosystem of people and partners. It will be a privilege to be there, but it’s just talking. As soon as we get back home and go out onto the street no one has a clue. Governments can make pledges, but wider cultural change will take too long and we don’t have time. I am going back to the idea of working on ourselves first if we want to see change. I think it comes down to individual action.”
The AWorld app, a partner to the United Nation’s ActNow campaign and the European Commision’s Climate Pact Initiative, is a guide for people who want to reduce their carbon footprint. A user can build their own set of easy-to-achieve tasks and goals (such as turning off lights or choosing clothes made from recycled fabrics), log when they’ve done them, and then see the positive impact of their choices through the amount of carbon, litres of water, and kilowatts of electricity saved. From December 2023, the app will include mobility data and automatically calculate the carbon footprint of journeys depending on the mode of transport, without the user having to input anything manually. Future features will include calculations around how actions can positively or negatively impact energy bills.
“I feel it is our responsibility at AWorld to build a path with technology that gently nudges users and rewards them.” Key to this strategy is working with large businesses and corporates, who can leverage the AWorld app to encourage behaviour change in employees and consumers, which, in turn, can help them reach their own net-zero goals. Capgemini, Cognizant, and Blackrock are some of the companies currently using AWorld to empower their stakeholders to make positive changes.
“We have built out our experience based on what we understand about motivations. There are people who will make changes because it makes them feel good, they want to fit into a community of like-minded people, they want to compete, or they want to be rewarded.” The app caters to these motivations through gamification and a regular stream of content sharing big-picture context. “It needs to feel ‘normal’,” Alessandro says, “not like you are doing something sustainable that requires loads of inputs.”
Once COP28 is over, Alessandro will be back in his native Italy to launch a citizen engagement campaign in Umbria, with campaigns in other regions such as Marche, Lombardy, and Lazio, on the horizon. It’s an exhausting schedule but Alessandro is all about action. “We all need to be active,” he says. “There are no passengers on Planet Earth, we are all crew.”
Disccover the AWorld app in the App Store or Google Play. Find out more about employee engagement via AWorld at aworld.org
The latest edition of “Architizer: The World’s Best Architecture” — a stunning, hardbound book celebrating the most inspiring contemporary architecture from around the globe — is now available. Order your copy today.
There is a quality one finds in people who really believe in what they do. It is not excitement in the voice or a twinkle in the eye. No, it is simply the fact that they are eager to explain what they do as clearly as they can. With this type, there is no space for any sort of conversational filler. Time is of the essence, and at the end of the discussion, they want to make sure, above all, that you “got” it, that you grasped their message.
The type I am thinking of is the opposite of the dissimulating salesperson who speaks with an agenda in mind. Ironically, of course, a person who believes in what they do is far more convincing than any salesperson.
In any case, this was my experience speaking with Philippe Block, a structural design researcher at ETH Zurich who is best known for his commitment to “strength through geometry,” or the idea that the mass of buildings — and with it their embodied carbon footprints — could be greatly reduced if architects were more thoughtful about load distribution. Instead of beams and flat floor plates, Block envisions a future of vaults and curves. With the right shapes, he argues, we could create high-rise buildings with far less concrete and, in many cases, almost no steel reinforcements whatsoever. And like the Gothic cathedrals he loves, these structures would stand for centuries, persisting through hurricanes, earthquakes and floods.
The fan-vaulted stone ceiling of King’s College chapel at the University of Cambridge, UK: fully unreinforced, standing over five centuries, and proportionally as thin as an eggshell. Photo by J. Kurt Schmidt. Used with permission from Block Research Group.
Reducing the amount of concrete used in construction would have a major impact on climate change. It is estimated that 8% of global carbon emissions are caused by the manufacture of cement, the binding agent in concrete.
Block, it must be noted, is no longer simply a researcher. He recently launched a company called VAULTED AG which produces customizable modular floor plates made from unreinforced concrete. The plates, of course, use the most sustainable concrete available on the market. But the most important aspect of them is not what they are made from, it is their shape. Due to the use of vaulting, these floor plates use 60% less concrete and 80% less steel than the standard floor plates used in the industry.
Yet they are just as strong, and can easily be used in the construction of high-density, high-rise buildings, meeting a practical need in a world with a population projected to grow by over 2 billion in the next thirty years. Geometry, Block explained, is not just about beautiful shells, opera houses and stadiums. It isn’t just for show.
VAULTED AG commercialises a low-carbon, fully circular prefab vaulted floor, called the Rippmann Floor System (RFS), that reduces the global warming potential (GWP) compared to a flat slab in reinforced concrete by at least two-thirds. Here, workers install a Rippmann floor plate in a 10 story project in Zug, Switzerland. Photo by Gabriele Mattei, used with permission by VAULTED AG.
When I spoke to Block over Zoom, he was eager to get down to the nuts and bolts of the discussion, which ended up lasting over an hour. The questions I had prepared ended up being irrelevant, as his slideshow presentation covered all that I wanted to ask and more. It never occurred to Block that I might be interested in talking about his background or personal life. From the jump, our conversation was all about proving his thesis that geometry, or building technique, is more important than materials when it comes to sustainable construction. This, he explained, is the concept behind VAULTED AG’s revolutionary floor plates. And if this principle were widely applied, it could change the future of construction forever.
“When speaking of sustainability, so many people, in a very un-nuanced and simplistic way, talk about materials only, right?” he said, about a minute into the conversation. “Wood is good, concrete is bad. That is an absolute absurdity. It is not just about material, it’s also about how much you need, which is where structural design and optimization comes in, and then, increasingly important, the extending of resources or entire components past the first life of a building — to keep things in the loop in a circular construction economy.”
The three main levers that contribute to the environmental impact of a building or construction, focusing on embodied emissions and resources. Graphic prepared by Catherine De Wolf & Corentin Fivet. Used with permission from Block Research Group.
Here Block pulled up a graphic showing how he calculates the environmental impact over the lifespan of a building. He emphasized that his goal was not only to lower the mass of buildings, reducing the amount of carbon, but also to use forms of concrete that are recyclable, and that can be reused once a building has been demolished. Concrete used correctly, he explained, is just as sustainable as wood, especially if one takes into account the lifespan of the building and the ability for unreinforced concrete to be reused and repurposed.
At this point, Block moved to a slide of the famous fan vaulting over the nave of King’s College Chapel at the University of Cambridge, England. This structure, he explained, has stood for over 500 years. More impressive than this, the stone vaults of this structure are simply “masonry systems… just pieces of stone held together in compression. They stand because they have a good geometry while being proportionally as thin as an eggshell.”
The Armadillo Vault, shown at the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale: 399 pieces of cut stone, held together through geometry, without mortar, glue or reinforcement, using the same principles as Gothic Cathedrals and demonstrating the beauty of strength through geometry. Photo by Iwan Baan. Used with permission from Block Research Group.
Block then opened his next slide, an installation he and his team created for the 2016 Venice Architecture Biennale. “What you are looking at are 399 pieces of cut stone that are held together because of their geometry, no glue, no mortar, no reinforcement, fully dry assembled,” he explained. “So the same principles as to why the cathedrals are standing make this possible.” What struck me about this installation was just how thin the shell was. With the right geometry, a lot can be done with a small amount of materials.
Concrete, he explained, essentially behaves like stone once it is cast, so masonry principles apply to concrete construction. However, most modern buildings require massive amounts of steel-reinforced concrete because the structure is not assembled according to intelligent masonry principles. The key is to “align the structure to where the compressive forces naturally want to be,” unlike a “typical beam,” which does not offload the weight in any kind of strategic way, but simply braces the structure.
Concrete is an artificial stone, and like stone, it does not want to be a straight beam, it wants to be a masonry arch. A rib-stiffened, arched floor with tension ties uses up to 70% less concrete and 90% less steel compared to a flat slab in reinforced concrete for the same structural requirements. Graphic prepared by Block Research Group, ETH Zurich. Used with permission.
These are the principles that underlie Block’s vaulted floors, called the Rippmann Floor System or simply RFS. Aesthetically, I told Block, I really appreciated how these floors looked once installed, especially from underneath, where they can be installed to appear as beautiful vaulted ceilings. In the future, I proposed, perhaps flat roofs and ceilings will be associated with the 20th century, while geometrically informed construction will be considered a more contemporary building practice.
Block agreed, adding that there is something about these spaces that, like Gothic cathedrals, “feel good” to the visitor. One can tell that the materials are “happy,” that they are in an arrangement that “makes sense.” However, he added, he did not want to really push this point too hard. One could hang a simple flat suspended ceiling, concealing the expressive elements under thin shells. Architects who want to work with flat ceilings are still free to do so with this new system. Plates are fully customizable and easy to dry assemble on site. They are just as easy to work with as traditional floor systems; they just use drastically less material, and have a much smaller carbon footprint.
The CreaTower project in Zug, Switzerland, designed by Gigon+Guyer Architects, introduces the Rippman Floor System in a 10-story office tower. In the interior view, note the beautiful ribbed detailing on the ceiling, which makes structural elements of the flooring system visible. PONNIE images. Used with permission from Gigon+Guyer
The Rippmann Floor system is already being employed in commerical projects. In Zug, Switzerland, Gigon+Guyer is using the system for their CreaTower project, which includes a 10 story, 40 meter office tower.
I left my conversation with Block with a renewed sense of optimism about the future of architecture. Beautiful, powerful buildings need not be accompanied by a guilty conscience. With the right kind of ingenuity, we can have dense urban construction without catastrophic waste. Sustainability does not mean thinking smaller — just thinking differently. And maybe lighter…
Cover image: An early, sand-3D-printed prototype of the discrete masonry floor, which was further developed into the Rippmann Floor System. Used with permission from Block Research Group.
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Spotted: In our ever-developing world, demand for raw materials surges, surpassing our supply. Until now, we have relied on increased mining and agrochemicals to try and balance supply with demand. However, this has come at the expense of our resources, environment, health, and the planet’s biodiversity.
Using a technology that’s been developing for over 35 years, Slovakian startup Ekolive is rewriting the playbook. The company has found a way to ecologically process minerals, revive mining waste, and rejuvenate contaminated or exhausted soils using microorganisms.
The company’s eco-friendly solution to the mineral supply-demand challenge harnesses the power of bacteria to remove impurities. This method enhances raw material value, accessibility, and usability of unprocessed, primary materials and secondary minerals. Ekolive’s technology can also be applied to hazardous materials like mining waste, giving newfound value to materials previously deemed useless.
But that’s not all: Ekolive discovered its technology also had amazing effects on agriculture. Managing Director Darina Štyriaková explains that the specially selected mix of minerals and microorganisms “regenerates” contaminated soils, optimises the structure of exhausted soils, and “strengthens plants in different ways.” Štyriaková adds that these results are “not created by mixing chemicals” but “by a replication of natural weathering and soil formation recipe.”
Founded in 2018, Ekolive is now focusing on commercialisation after successful validations. The company currently has five bioleaching production sites in the EU, with three more in the pipeline outside of Europe.
Springwise has previously spotted other innovations that process soil contaminants, from soil-cleaning microbes to pre and probiotics that improve soil health and crop resilience.
Spotted: Neoprene – used widely in waterwear – was invented in 1930 out of petroleum-based chemicals. However, an alternative made without petroleum products was actually developed in the 1960s. This uses calcium carbonate from limestone and has become common in most high-end wetsuits as a sustainable and high-performance option. However, limestone neoprene is often lined with nylon – a fabric also derived from petroleum.
Now, Dutch ‘water fashion’ brand Wallien is taking sustainability one step further by replacing all virgin petroleum-based materials in its wetsuits. The company’s suits originally all used a Lycra that consisted largely of recycled materials derived from pre- and post-industrial waste, such as discarded fishing nets and carpets.
However, Wallien’s newest wetsuit range, the Horizonia range, is made from Yulex, a natural latex rubber that is ‘tapped’ (like maple syrup) from the rubber tree Hevea Brasiliensis. Because the rubber trees Yulex is derived from absorb CO2, the wetsuits made using this material are actually more sustainable than those made from limestone neoprene. The trees are all grown on sustainably managed plantations certified by the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and/or the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification (PEFC).
The company goes even further, packaging all its wetsuits in recyclable cardboard and bio-plastic bags made from corn. Wallien also aims to limit transport pollution by working with manufacturers close to its distribution warehouse in Amsterdam. And all of this commitment to sustainability pays off. The company has annual revenues of around $5 million (around €4.7 million) and an impressive following of professional surfers.
There is no shortage of innovations replacing petroleum-derived products with more sustainable alternatives. Some recent ones spotted by Springwise include sustainable packaging options and a polystyrene foam replacement made from agri-waste.
Spotted: The European Commission is navigating a bumpy path as it attempts to reduce the amount of toxic chemicals in the environment. A proposal on a sustainable use of pesticides regulation (SUR) suggests halving the amount of pesticides in use in the region by 2030 may be debated in early 2024. On the other hand, the revision of a broad chemicals strategy for sustainability appears to be indefinitely paused.
In the meantime, Belgian agritech company Minagro is helping farmers reduce their chemical impact and navigate changing regulations by providing bio-based versions of essential crop care products. With a number of patents already in place, the company provides three different categories of crop inputs. In-can preservatives, adjuvants, and solvents are made from the natural raw ingredients sugarcane bagasse and essential oils.
In-can preservatives help preserve aqueous-based products in their liquid form. Adjuvants help other chemicals work more effectively, and solvents make it easier to spread crop treatments by dissolving certain products. Agrochemical companies can replace standard products with Minagro’s bio-based versions and help farmers reduce the negative impact of their agricultural activity.
The company provides distributors with technical support in formulating just the right mix of its inputs for desired results. All Minagro products are biodegradable, making them an important piece in growers’ transition towards reductions in groundwater pollution and soil damage. And most organic certification authorities allow for the use of Minagro’s biochemicals.
From drone-powered pest control to carbon-neutral fertiliser that improves crop yields, Springwise’s database contains a diverse range of innovations seeking ways to change agriculture for the better while making it possible to feed the growing global population.
Spotted: The negative environmental impacts of mining are well-established. As well as generating substantial volumes of greenhouse gas emissions, the mining process is also responsible for biodiversity loss, water contamination, and air pollution. Mineral extraction is still necessary, however, with these materials playing an essential role in energy transition technologies, as well as in electronics and fine jewellery.
Startup Regeneration, which was founded by US NGO Resolve, is on a mission to make mining a sustainable practice. Instead of sourcing new mineral deposits, the company has a growing network of old mining sites that makes use of waste rock and mine tailings to access essential minerals. Mining techniques in the past were highly inefficient, as well as highly damaging to the environment, meaning that lots of valuable materials have been left behind in legacy mines. Using new methods and technologies, Regeneration is able to re-mine and take full advantage of old mining tailings.
In addition to putting mining waste to good use, Regeneration also restores surrounding ecosystems that have been damaged by past mining practices, clearing polluted water systems and rebuilding habitats. Once fully re-mined, the company closes out a legacy mine properly to ensure that an area will not continue to be polluted. The startup then monitors biodiversity and regeneration progress on its closed sites to make sure the environment is healing as expected.
Brands can partner with the organisation to access sustainably re-mined minerals and metals for their own products, and Regeneration uses its sales profits to go back into habitat restoration and mining closures.
The company has already joined forces with the likes of Apple, and in May this year, popular Canada-based jewellery brand Mejuri also announced its own partnership as part of its first Sustainability Report. Through this relationship, Mejuri will be able to produce its jewellery lines using efficiently and sustainably mined metals, while helping to support essential ecological rehabilitation.
In the archive, Springwise has spotted other innovators looking to make jewellery better for the planet, including one that is 3D printing zero-waste items and another that sources diamonds from the ocean.