LOOPED IN with Carl Warkentin

PODCAST · business

LOOPED IN with Carl Warkentin

The podcast about understanding, building and managing circular business models - this is the place where we dive deep into the future of business, sustainability, and circular economy. After a decade of entrepreneurial experience as a founder and investor, Carl had countless, meaningful behind-the-scenes conversations about how we can reshape industries, close the loop, and create real impact. And now, we want to bring these conversations to you.On Looped In, Carl sits down with entrepreneurs, business owners, venture capitalists, and policymakers who are at the forefront of change. Together, we’ll explore innovative business models, breakthrough technologies, and the regulations shaping the circular economy.

  1. 20

    The Future of Product Creation with Mode Maison Founder & CEO Steven Gay

    Imagine typing, “Warmest low‑profile jacket for Siberia, size M, modern look,” and seconds later seeing a faithful simulation on your avatar—plus the exact factory files needed to make it. That’s the leap from pretty pixels to physics‑native product creation we dig into with Steven, founder and CEO of Mode Maison Home.We trace Steven’s path from Ralph Lauren’s Purple Label to building TMAC, a material scanning system that captures not only how fabrics look but how they behave—torsion, tension, compression, and thermal performance. Those measurements fuel a physical world model that knows where a sneaker will bend, how a linen will drape, and when a suede will fail, producing simulations you can trust and manufacturing files you can ship. The result: fewer samples, faster cycles, and designs that move from intent to production without the usual guesswork.This shift unlocks on‑demand, onshore microfactories and a new kind of commerce where the minimum order quantity is one. We talk hyper‑personalization at scale—garments tailored to your climate, taste, and movement—while cutting overproduction, warehousing, and global shipping. We also explore circularity with digital product passports and embedded IDs, making resale, repair, and recycling smarter and simpler. Along the way, we weigh real challenges: today’s siloed toolchains, the risk of brand sameness in “ghost manufacturing,” and how brands can stay distinct by treating AI as a physics‑aware co‑designer rather than a pixel pusher.Looking ahead, Steven outlines a five‑year horizon where brands specify outcomes in plain language and receive validated designs plus tech packs in moments, and a ten‑year horizon where brands act as creative directors while systems generate products within their guardrails. If you care about sustainable fashion, advanced manufacturing, or AI that grasps the real world, this conversation connects the dots from factory floor data to build‑ready files. Enjoy the episode, then share it with a friend, subscribe, and leave a review telling us the first product you’d generate.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  2. 19

    From UGC to On-Demand Manufacturing - A Holistic Approach with Kitty Yeung

    What if the best-performing fashion ads never required shipping a single sample? We sit down with Kitty Young, founder of Wear It AI, to explore how hyper-realistic virtual try-on turns everyday photos into high-converting product content—then feeds those signals back into a smarter, cleaner supply chain. Kitty shares how brands can swap expensive, unpredictable influencer campaigns for scaled UGC, where micro and nano creators generate themselves in your styles in minutes and get paid on performance, engagement, and remixes. The content looks like real life—true bodies, true fits, brand-correct styling—because trust sells better than filters.The conversation goes beyond marketing. Kitty maps a practical route to on-demand production: use AI to see what people actually want, connect those preferences to 3D simulation, image-to-pattern generation, and local microfactories, and produce with MOQ of one. We talk digital printing, laser cutting, alternative bonding, and the stubborn realities of sewing automation. The goal isn’t hype; it’s a measurable drop in waste and lead time, with fewer missed bets and a faster path from try-on to delivery. Think Starbucks for apparel: proven silhouettes, seasonal specials, and personalization on fit, fabric, and print—served within hours to days.With a background in physics and stints in quantum computing, Kitty brings a systems mindset to fashion tech. We unpack how shoppable UGC, body-accurate avatars, and integrated tooling can make stores feel like studios and social feeds feel like showrooms. If you’re building for sustainable fashion, DTC growth, or retail innovation, you’ll find a blueprint here: everyone can be a model, many can be designers, and brands can finally match demand with supply in real time.Enjoyed the conversation? Follow, share with a colleague who obsesses over on-demand, and leave a quick review with your favorite insight so we can bring more voices like Kitty’s to the mic.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  3. 18

    Inside China’s Circular Textile Revolution: From Manufacturing to Recycling with CKG Director Vincent Djen

    What does a truly circular textile business look like when you operate both a factory floor and a recycling line? We sit down with entrepreneur Vincent Jin to map the entire loop—from shrinking order sizes and digitized sewing lines to China’s door‑to‑door collection networks feeding textile‑to‑textile recyclers. The story starts with a family manufacturer shaped by early Scandinavian sustainability demands, and then accelerates as DTC, tariffs, and lead‑time pressure force radical flexibility and a service‑first mindset.Vincent opens up about the nuts and bolts of recycling at scale: why pre‑sorting still relies on skilled hands, where AI sorting falls short on dark colors and complex blends, and how preprocessing into pellets or popcorn meets the purity specs of chemical and enzymatic recyclers. We explore the rise of microfactories as a tool to slash overproduction—keeping core styles in traditional lines while local, on‑demand units handle reorders, collaborations, and regional spikes within days. Along the way, we unpack the real power of transparency through chain‑of‑custody, LCAs, and the coming digital product passport, which ties material truth to a simple scan.The conversation doesn’t shy away from hard questions: Can sewing be fully automated? Why do blends and trims still block circularity? How will fast fashion evolve as T2T capacity scales in China and beyond? Vincent shares a pragmatic ten‑year outlook driven by robotics, smarter design for recycling, and brands that think like operators—fast, open, and data‑literate. If you care about ethical sourcing, EPR readiness, and the future of circular fashion, this is a rare, ground‑level guide to what’s working, what’s not, and what’s next.Enjoyed the conversation? Follow the show, share it with a colleague, and leave a quick review to help others discover it.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  4. 17

    The K-Resale Playbook: Brand-Led Re-Commerce in Korea with Seah Joo from Relay

    What if secondhand felt as polished as buying new—and actually grew brand loyalty? We sit down with Relay, the Korean recommerce engine powering white‑label resale for major fashion groups and department stores, to unpack how trust, speed, and cleaning every item can flip circularity into a profit center. From doorstep pick‑ups and instant store credit to meticulous QC and photography, Relay’s model keeps resale inside the brand ecosystem and turns trade‑ins into repeat purchases.We get into the mechanics: why department stores like Lotte and Hyundai became pivotal partners, how a white‑label experience preserves brand equity, and the operational backbone that makes it all work. You’ll hear how care labels and distributor tags streamline authentication in Korea, why in‑store pop‑ups unlock hidden supply, and how dynamic pricing helps sellers feel valued while buyers feel lucky. With one of the world’s fastest e‑commerce markets and a consumer base that prizes precision and service, Korea is stress‑testing recommerce—and the results are compelling, with rapid sell‑through and growing mainstream acceptance.There’s a bigger thesis here: social impact scales when it follows a great business model. Relay shares a candid view on aligning incentives, building credibility through hands‑on logistics, and using data and selective AI to remove friction without overpromising tech. We also look ahead to a curated hub that aggregates high‑quality secondhand across partners, creating network effects for brands big and small. If you care about circular economy, resale operations, and how to make sustainability pay, this conversation is a playbook for turning intention into action.If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a colleague, and leave a review—what’s the one change that would make you trade in more often?Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  5. 16

    Scaling Upcycling: How MOOT Turns Textile Waste into Profit with CEO Michael Pfeifer

    What if the clothes, uniforms, and textiles your company discards could become a source of revenue instead of a disposal expense? Michael Brenner, co-founder of Mood, reveals how industrial-scale upcycling is transforming the textile waste landscape, creating profitable business models from what was previously considered garbage.The conversation begins with Michael sharing how Mood evolved from a small Berlin-based B2C brand into a powerhouse B2B service provider, helping major corporations like DHL, Deutsche Bahn, and the German national football team transform their discarded textiles into desirable, sellable products. Through these partnerships, Mood has proven that sustainability initiatives can generate actual profits, not just reduce environmental impact.Michael takes us behind the scenes of their innovative collection system, where branded containers placed in corporate offices (rather than on streets) yield higher-quality materials while creating an additional revenue stream. This approach stands in stark contrast to traditional textile collection schemes that are increasingly economically unviable as fast fashion quality declines and secondhand platforms siphon off the best materials.The discussion delves into the regulatory challenges facing the European textile market, particularly the inconsistent implementation of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes across the continent. Michael shares candid insights about the shortcomings of current approaches in countries like France and the Netherlands, emphasizing that Europe needs comprehensive solutions to address the fundamental problem: we're simply producing and consuming too many textiles.Whether you're a sustainability professional, fashion industry insider, or business leader looking for innovative approaches to corporate waste, this episode offers practical insights into how upcycling can transform sustainability from a cost center into a profitable venture. Subscribe now and discover how the future of fashion might not be in creating new materials, but in creatively reusing what we already have.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  6. 15

    From Policy to Action: Building CIRCULAR REPUBLIC with Susanne Kadner

    Susanne Kadner's journey from climate science to circular economy pioneer reveals a profound shift in how we approach environmental challenges. Rather than focusing on restrictions, circular economy offers a positive vision of innovation and redesign that gets people excited about change."Coming from climate mitigation, it was always about what we shouldn't do," Kadner explains. "The positive vision of circular economy—how to do things differently while being innovative—is a much better way to get people into action." This refreshing perspective helped her build the Circular Economy Initiative Germany at Acatech, bringing together over 120 experts to create Germany's first circularity roadmap.Despite this policy success, Kadner grew frustrated with the slow pace of top-down change. Her transition to Unternehmertum, Europe's largest entrepreneurship center, marked a strategic shift toward implementation. As co-founder of Circular Republic, she now focuses on creating lighthouse projects that demonstrate circularity in practice through three pillars: Enable (capacity building), Act (implementation projects), and Inspire (communication).The conversation explores the tensions between pilot projects and scaling, between theory and practice, and between sustainability and geopolitical arguments for circularity. Munich emerges as a uniquely positioned ecosystem for circular innovation, combining manufacturing heritage with startup culture and global corporate presence.What distinguishes Circular Republic is its role as a neutral platform where companies, startups, academics, and policymakers collaborate without prioritizing any single stakeholder's interests. This ecosystem approach addresses the complex, interconnected challenges that no organization can solve alone.Ready to move beyond theory and implement circular solutions in your organization? Connect with Circular Republic to explore how our ecosystem can accelerate your journey toward circularity and resilience.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  7. 14

    War Over Resources: Building Local, Circular Supply Chains with Lisa Morales-Hellebo from REFASHIOND Ventures

    Lisa Morales-Hellebo takes us on a captivating journey from her DIY beginnings in the Bronx to becoming a pioneering force in reshaping global supply chains. Her story reveals how necessity and curiosity led her through roles in design, tech startups, and eventually to founding Refashion Ventures – a fund uniquely positioned to transform how we think about manufacturing and materials.After experiencing firsthand the challenges of being a Latina woman raising capital in the male-dominated tech world, Lisa chose a different path. Rather than following traditional venture capital models, she built a community-first approach that now connects over 5,000 members across 148 countries. This network became the foundation for a distinctive investment strategy focused on localization, circularity, and distributed manufacturing.What sets Lisa's approach apart is her hands-on involvement with portfolio companies. She shares a remarkable example of helping Mothership Materials – a company that can extract valuable biomolecules from waste – pivot from beauty ingredients to becoming "the unlock for the bioeconomy." By reframing their story and connecting them directly with major corporations, she helped generate a $100 million pipeline in just weeks, demonstrating how venture capital can create value beyond simply writing checks.The conversation explores why national security concerns and resource constraints may ultimately drive supply chain transformation more effectively than sustainability goals alone. As global competition for raw materials intensifies, technologies that can extract value from waste streams or create bio-based alternatives to petroleum products become strategically essential, not just environmentally desirable.For entrepreneurs working in industrial transformation, Lisa offers invaluable guidance: deeply understand your customers' challenges, embrace the messiness of working with small businesses, and design technologies that feel like "magic" rather than homework. The future belongs not to those building one-size-fits-all AI solutions, but to those who can build trust with the businesses that collectively drive 70% of our economy.Curious about transforming supply chains or the future of materials? Book office hours through Refashion Ventures' website and tap into Lisa's wealth of knowledge and connections.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  8. 13

    From Pilot to Scale: Why Circularity Is Europe’s Next Competitive Advantage with Matthias Ballweg

    What if the most sustainable business model was also the most profitable? In this eye-opening conversation with Mazze Ballweg, we dive deep into why circular economy has evolved from an environmental nice-to-have to an economic imperative for businesses across Europe.Mazze takes us on his journey from traditional consulting at McKinsey and strategy work at Volkswagen to the moment sustainability "hit him" in 2019, prompting his career pivot toward circularity. With refreshing clarity, he explains why material circularity tackles multiple planetary boundaries simultaneously - revealing how 90% of biodiversity loss and 50% of climate impacts stem from material extraction and processing.The heart of our discussion centers on CIRCULAR REPUBLIC's groundbreaking work transforming supply chains by connecting large corporations with innovative startups. Their battery recycling pilot perfectly exemplifies this approach: combining startups specializing in reverse logistics, automated disassembly, and advanced recycling technologies to create a more profitable alternative to traditional processes. This isn't just theory - it's practical implementation that's changing how businesses operate.What makes this conversation particularly compelling is Mazze's economic framing of circularity. "No one needs to care about planetary health to invest in circular economy - the business case alone is compelling," he explains. As global supply chains fragment and resource security becomes increasingly uncertain, circular approaches like urban mining and regenerative materials become essential for Europe's competitiveness.Whether you're a business leader seeking new opportunities, an entrepreneur developing circular solutions, or simply curious about how our economy is evolving, this episode offers valuable insights into how circularity is reshaping business models across industries. Listen now to understand why circular economy isn't just good for the planet - it's vital for future business success.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  9. 12

    Building circular ecosystems and urban mining for textiles with Cyndi Rhoades (Circle 8)

    What if our old clothes could become the foundation of an entirely new industry? Cindy Rhoades, a filmmaker who pivoted to become a textile entrepreneur, takes us on her remarkable journey from music videos to pioneering circular solutions for the fashion industry.Rhoades' story begins with creative nightclub events that made social and environmental issues accessible and engaging. When one such event focused on ethical fashion, she discovered her passion for solving textile waste challenges, leading her to found Worn Again in 2005. The company's evolution from upcycling discarded airline seat covers into handbags to developing groundbreaking molecular recycling technology perfectly illustrates the learning curve of circular innovation.But technology alone doesn't solve systemic problems. As Rhoades discovered, even the most promising recycling methods face a critical infrastructure gap. Her newest venture, Circle 8, addresses this challenge through automated sorting facilities designed specifically to prepare non-rewearable textiles for chemical and mechanical recycling. What makes her approach unique is the emphasis on ecosystem building – creating collaborative relationships between brands, recyclers, and existing sorters that connect waste streams with future manufacturing needs.The most compelling insight Rhoades shares is reframing textile waste as an economic opportunity. For countries that don't produce traditional textile raw materials, circular systems enable "urban mining" – transforming domestic waste into valuable resources and establishing entirely new industries. With Circle 8's automated sorting line arriving in March and plans for a 25,000-ton facility underway, Rhoades is turning this vision into reality.Whether you're fascinated by sustainability innovation, circular business models, or the future of fashion, this conversation offers a masterclass in how ecosystem thinking can transform waste challenges into economic opportunities. Listen now to discover how your discarded clothes might fuel tomorrow's textile revolution.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  10. 11

    Regulating the Future of Fashion: The Impact of California’s Textile EPR on the U.S. with Rachel Kibbe from American Circular Textiels

    How do you build a circular textile system in a country that lacks the infrastructure to collect, sort, or recycle at scale?In this deep dive conversation, Carl is joined by Rachel Kibbe, founder of American Circular Textiles and Circular Services Group, to unpack the complexities of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in the U.S. and draw sharp comparisons with Europe’s more established systems.Together, they explore:The current white spots in U.S. textile collection and why Europe’s 20+ year head start mattersHow the California SB707 EPR bill could redefine circularity—if implemented with the right incentivesFee structures, eco-modulation, and the need to finance not just design, but also infrastructureThe risk of monopolization in Producer Responsibility Organizations (PROs) and what it means for innovationWhy voluntary, collaborative blueprints—like the one Carl is helping pilot in Germany—could shape future regulationThis is not just another podcast on sustainability. It’s a rare, behind-the-scenes dialogue between two people on the front lines of system change—blending entrepreneurial urgency with deep policy knowledge.If you’re working in fashion, waste management, policy, or investing in circular solutions, this episode will challenge your assumptions and offer a grounded roadmap for what real circularity looks like at scale.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  11. 10

    Funding What Business Can’t: Inclusive Circularity through Philanthropy with Fernanda Drumond from H&M Foundation

    “Philanthropy isn’t just about giving — it’s about igniting. We step in where no one else can, absorbing risk, catalyzing innovation, and building ecosystems where businesses alone can’t go.”— Fernanda Drumond, H&M FoundationFernanda Drummond brings a refreshing perspective to the textile industry's sustainability challenges as Head of Collective Action at the H&M Foundation. In this illuminating conversation, she dismantles common misconceptions about philanthropy's role in creating systems change and reveals how the foundation operates as an orchestrator—not just a funder—of transformative collaborations.Diving deep into the foundation's unique approach, Fernanda explains how they identify critical gaps where philanthropic funds can spark innovation and collective action. Unlike project-based interventions that create limited impact, the H&M Foundation implements comprehensive programs that simultaneously address multiple barriers. The shocking revelation that the textile industry is only 0.3% circular serves as a sobering backdrop to the conversation. Fernanda emphasizes that no single solution—whether circular business models, recycled materials, or sustainable fibers—will move the needle significantly when implemented alone. Only through orchestrated, multi-stakeholder approaches can we hope to transform this deeply linear system.Perhaps most compelling is Fernanda's expanded definition of "just transition" beyond merely reskilling workers. Through programs like Operadita in Bangladesh, the foundation recognizes that garment workers facing automation need more than technical training—they need childcare, family support, safe transportation, and shifts in community perception to truly advance. This human-centered approach acknowledges workers as complete individuals with dreams, needs, and aspirations beyond their job functions.For entrepreneurs and businesses developing circular solutions, Fernanda offers invaluable advice: recognize and include the millions already working in circular economies through informal sectors. These waste pickers, sorters, and collectors possess generations of knowledge that should be built upon rather than bypassed in our rush toward formalized circularity.Connect with Fernanda on LinkedIn to share insights or learn more about the H&M Foundation's work in catalyzing inclusive circularity across the textile ecosystem.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  12. 9

    From Patagonia to Archive: Scaling Re-Commerce with Alex Kremer

    Alex Kremer takes us on a journey through the rapidly evolving world of branded resale, sharing hard-won insights from his pioneering work launching Patagonia's Worn Wear program and his current role as VP at Archive, which recently secured $30 million in Series B funding.What truly sets branded resale apart from generic marketplaces is the trust factor. Customers consistently pay premium prices when buying secondhand directly through a brand they trust, knowing the items have been properly inspected and authenticated. This creates a powerful value proposition for brands looking to capture revenue that would otherwise flow through third-party platforms like eBay or Poshmark.One of the most fascinating insights? Resale attracts customers nearly a decade younger than the typical buyer. These “aspirationalists” find an entry point to premium brands they couldn’t otherwise afford — and often become long-term loyalists. At the same time, existing customers use resale to responsibly manage and refresh their wardrobes, creating a truly circular ecosystem where community and commerce intersect.We also dive into the operational reality: from product identification and pricing models to warehouse processing, software integration, and returns management. Archive’s technology is helping brands treat resale not as a side project, but as a profitable business channel — and the results are proving it.Surprisingly, Alex shares that even smaller brands with strong communities are seeing success in resale. It’s not only about scale — it’s about engagement, product quality, and brand trust.We close with a global perspective: why Germany’s existing sorting and collection infrastructure gives it a unique head start, how return culture and customer expectations vary sharply between regions, why the U.S. is leading in resale innovation and brand adoption, and how Asia’s vintage obsession may unlock a different type of circular opportunity altogether.Ready to discover how branded resale can drive growth, loyalty, and real environmental impact? This episode is a masterclass in turning circularity into a competitive advantage.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  13. 8

    Revolutionizing Textile Production: on-shore, on-demand mass-customization with the Rodinia Generation's O-factory (Trine Young)

    Fashion has a dirty secret: brands routinely produce 30% more clothing than they'll ever sell. This deliberate overproduction is baked into a global supply chain that hasn't fundamentally changed in 75 years—one that pollutes watersheds, wastes resources, and disconnects production from actual consumer demand.Trine, founder and CEO of Rodinia Generation, is rewriting these rules with a revolutionary concept called the O-Factory. Housed in just 200 square meters, this "Omni Factory" transforms digital designs into finished garments in as little as 48 hours, all without using a single drop of water in the production process. The secret? A proprietary software "brain" that coordinates every step of manufacturing with unprecedented precision.When fashion brands work with traditional offshore manufacturers, they must forecast trends a year in advance, wait months for production and shipping, then warehouse excess inventory that frequently ends up discounted or destroyed. The O-Factory eliminates these inefficiencies by producing exactly what's needed, when and where it's needed. The technology uses biodegradable nano-pigment inks that require no washing or steaming, cutting CO2 emissions by up to 40% while producing zero wastewater.Most remarkably, this isn't just an environmental win—it's economically viable. While per-unit costs may be 20% higher than Asian manufacturing, Rodinia eliminates the substantial "shadow costs" of global production: shipping, tariffs, warehousing, and waste. A single production line can generate €12M in annual revenue with healthy margins, making sustainability profitable.Beyond economics, the O-Factory enables true mass customization, giving consumers garments tailored to their exact measurements rather than standardized sizes. Each piece can include a digital product passport via QR code, offering complete transparency about its production. Could this technology finally break fashion's addiction to overproduction and constant sales? Follow Rodinia's journey as they scale from proof-of-concept to a network of distributed factories, potentially transforming not just how our clothes are made, but our entire relationship with fashion.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  14. 7

    Sorting the Future: Rikke Bech on Scaling Circular Textile Innovation with NewRetex

    Meet the woman who's revolutionizing how we handle textile waste. Rikke Bech, CEO and founder of NewRetex, joins us from her facility in Denmark to reveal how her company has developed groundbreaking automated sorting technology that's changing the economics of textile recycling.Five years ago, Rikke saw a gap in the textile industry's approach to waste. While brands were talking about sustainability, the infrastructure to actually recycle clothing effectively didn't exist. Textile sorting remained labor-intensive, imprecise, and unprofitable. Drawing inspiration from the food industry's traceability systems and leveraging advanced technology, she created a solution that sorts post-consumer textiles into 31 different material and color categories with unprecedented precision.What makes NewRetex truly innovative isn't just the technology—it's their business model. Unlike traditional textile collectors who pay for feedstock and try to profit through resale, NewRetex receives payment from municipalities for their sorting services. They've flipped the economics of textile waste while building a comprehensive data collection system that follows materials from collection through recycling.We explore the entire process: from initial sorting where approximately 15% of items are directed to reuse, through the automated sorting lines that use near-infrared technology, augmented reality, and RGB scanning to identify materials with incredible accuracy. Rikke explains how their system produces recycled fibers that are being transformed into new yarns and garments, with clear traceability that earned them the distinction of becoming the first sorting company in the world to receive GRS certification.As Extended Producer Responsibility regulations approach in Europe, NewRetex' scalable technology offers a blueprint for how textile waste can be processed globally. The future of fashion is circular, and companies like NewRetex are building the infrastructure to make it possible.Check out this fascinating conversation about innovation, sustainability, and how one startup is transforming an industry's approach to waste.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  15. 6

    The Future of Textile Recycling with EEDEN Co-Founder & CEO Steffen Gerlach

    Join us in this insightful episode as we engage with Steffen, the dynamic co-founder of Eeden, a pioneering startup in the textile recycling sphere. In this episode, we delve deep into how Eeden leverages innovative recycling technologies to reclaim the two most common materials in textiles: cotton and polyester. Steffen shares his perspectives on the current state of the textile recycling market, unpacking the implications of rising regulatory pressures, investor sentiments, and macroeconomic trends. He contemplates the relationship between supply, demand, and pricing dynamics, stressing the pivotal role regulations play in shaping investor confidence in sustainable solutions. Throughout our conversation, we explore various recycling methods, showcasing the innovations that allow companies like Eeden to effectively manage mixed-fiber waste and create new textile solutions.As we navigate through the intricacies of recycling technology, Steffen emphasizes the necessity for a holistic approach to sustainability. Effective recycling cannot be just about recycling alone; it requires addressing the entire textile lifecycle to ensure meaningful environmental improvement. We conclude with Steffen's vision for the future of textile recycling, where market acceptance, regulatory support, and technological advancements come together to drive the industry towards a sustainable, circular future. Tune in to learn more about how we can collectively revolutionize the textile landscape for a brighter, greener tomorrow!Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  16. 5

    Investing in the Circular Economy with Regeneration VC partner Martijn Lopes Cardozo

    In this conversation, Martijn Lopes Cardozo shares his journey from a corporate career to becoming a successful entrepreneur in Silicon Valley, discussing the challenges and lessons learned along the way. He reflects on his return to Europe, the struggles he faced in replicating his success, and how he found purpose after setbacks. Martijn emphasizes the importance of focusing on purpose over traditional success metrics and discusses his role in the circular economy, particularly through his leadership at Circle Economy Foundation. The conversation also touches on the significance of the Circularity Gap Report and the ongoing challenges in achieving a circular economy. In this conversation, Martijn Lopes Cardozo discusses his work at Regeneration VC, focusing on the excitement of working with entrepreneurs in the impact investing space. He shares insights on the challenges and opportunities within the circular economy, the importance of a solid investment thesis, and the criteria for selecting investments. Martijn emphasizes the significance of geographical focus, particularly in the US market, and highlights innovative solutions to pressing issues like food waste (Orbirsk). He also addresses the need for measurable impact in investments and the challenges of scaling impact startups while balancing financial returns with social and environmental impact. Carl and Martin already met two years ago creating the first Circular Gap Report on city level with CIRCULAR REPUBLIC. In the conversation, Carl mentioned a circular economy database called Easy Match.Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  17. 4

    Challenging the system - Circular Economy as a solution to CSR & ESG with Kaitlyn Allen

    The landscape of corporate responsibility is changing, and in this episode, we explore how businesses are navigating the transition from Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) to Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) practices. Join us as we speak with Kaitlyn Allen, a serial impact entrepreneur and sustainability expert, who shares her valuable insights on how these frameworks are evolving and the ways they can enhance corporate accountability.Kaitlyn discusses the pivotal role of the Paris Agreement, which has shifted the narrative around sustainability from marketing fluff to essential business strategy. She explains how ESG practices address the risks associated with climate change and how companies are now compelled to integrate these metrics into their financial reporting. Delving deeper, we explore the repair economy—an emerging field that seeks to redefine consumer behavior by emphasizing the importance of product longevity and sustainability. Through Kaitlyn's work with Mend It, we learn how businesses can implement repair services as a core offering, aligning profit with purpose.This episode is a call to action for businesses to think differently about their societal impacts and the importance of viewing sustainability as interdependent with their operations. It’s about not just doing good but being structured to create lasting value for all stakeholders involved. Join us as we uncover the future of corporate responsibility and how companies can thrive by prioritizing sustainable practices. Don't forget to engage with us—leave your feedback, questions, or insights, and let's continue this important conversation together!Please check out Kaitlyn's sites: www.mendit.appwww.menderguild.comContact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  18. 3

    Transforming a highly optimized industry with textile recycling pioneer Luke Henning from Circ

    In a world increasingly burdened by textile waste, the urgency for sustainable practices in the fashion industry has never been more pressing. Join us for an engaging conversation with Luke Henning, Chief Business Officer at Circ, as we tackle the complexities of textile recycling and the vision behind establishing a true circular economy. Luke shares his in-depth expertise and insights on how Circ aims to reinvent the way we view clothing waste and recycling through innovative technology and proactive industry strategies.This episode dives into the essence of Circ's mission, emphasizing that striving for circularity goes beyond merely recycling materials. Luke sheds light on the intricate relationships between brands, suppliers, and technologies that drive successful recycling initiatives. Discover how their unique approach to hydrothermal processing sets them apart from traditional recycling methods and why this could be the key to unlocking a sustainable future for textiles.We also explore the vital role that regulation and EPR schemes play in transforming the industry. Luke explains how these structures can incentivize brands toward greater sustainability while simultaneously addressing economic realities in implementing circular systems. As we look to the future, Luke shares his optimistic vision for the textile industry's shift toward circularity by 2030, highlighting milestones that can propel us into a new era of environmentally responsible fashion. Tune in to gain a deeper understanding of the pressing issues at hand and what needs to be done to drive long-lasting change. Subscribe, share, and join the conversation on how we can collectively move toward a more sustainable textile industry!Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

  19. 2

    Intro

    Contact UsThis is interactive content - send us your questions to the guests and we record another session just focusing on your questions!You have suggestions for new guests or want to sponsor the show?Contact Carl via LinkedInThanks for listening and keep podcasting!

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

The podcast about understanding, building and managing circular business models - this is the place where we dive deep into the future of business, sustainability, and circular economy. After a decade of entrepreneurial experience as a founder and investor, Carl had countless, meaningful behind-the-scenes conversations about how we can reshape industries, close the loop, and create real impact. And now, we want to bring these conversations to you.On Looped In, Carl sits down with entrepreneurs, business owners, venture capitalists, and policymakers who are at the forefront of change. Together, we’ll explore innovative business models, breakthrough technologies, and the regulations shaping the circular economy.

HOSTED BY

Carl Warkentin

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