As industries from aviation to automotive race to cut carbon emissions, lightweight composite materials have become essential. But while their use has grown rapidly, recycling them has remained one of manufacturing’s hardest sustainability challenges.
A British Manufacturer Finds a Way Forward
A British manufacturer founded almost two centuries ago believes it has found a way forward.
James Cropper, a UK‑based materials company established in 1845, has developed a new manufacturing approach that allows high‑value composite fibres, including carbon fibre waste, to be reused in demanding industrial applications rather than being downcycled or discarded.
Still operating from its historic mill site in Cumbria, James Cropper has spent generations working with fibres. That long industrial heritage has now been applied to one of the most complex waste streams facing modern manufacturing.
Composite materials are prized for their strength and light weight, making them central to aircraft, electric vehicles, and renewable energy technologies. Yet their complexity makes them difficult to recycle, and much composite waste today ends up in low‑value uses or landfill.