solosails
Well-Known Member
Hi All,
I have just started a debate within the sailmaking industry over on wwwsaildesigner.net on the creation of a 'closed loop' sailmaking industry system, whereby there is a line of sails (probably just cruising sails for now) that have a deposit paid on them by the customers that is redeemable on a new sail at the end of the old's working life.
The idea being an incentive to get end users to return their sails for reclamation of the fibres and raw materials specifically for them to then be re-manufactured into new cloth and rings etc for a circular or closed loop type of manufacturing process. Based on Ellen MacArthur's very amazing work http://www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/circular-economy
The hope is that this system will create at a minimum of 50% less landfill of old non biodegradable plastic sails, a massive reduction of new oil based fiber manufacture etc. It would also mean that any scrap materials at manufacture that normally get land filled, would be incorporated in the circular reclamation.
The reason I post here is that I know the sailmaking industry is keen to do it, but how do the public feel about this proposal?
Potentially (although no framework has been made yet) the customer would bear an initial extra one off cost to join the system in the form of a deposit. This is then applied to the cost of the next sail and so on. Obviously there is far more work for the sailmakers as they have to strip and separate all of the individual components of each returned sail.
The other thing to consider is that the sails might well need to initially (until processes improve) be a little heavier in weight in order to compensate for the lower tenacity of the recycled yarns. This is the reason for stating cruising sails would probably be the first to line of manufacturing to see this circular economy type production. However, I feel most cruisers would be happy to have a heavier cloth in the knowledge that the sail is basically going to produce little or no waste ever again and is using a fraction of the amount of oil to produce it.
Please let me know your thoughts on this proposal.
Thanks, Andrew
I have just started a debate within the sailmaking industry over on wwwsaildesigner.net on the creation of a 'closed loop' sailmaking industry system, whereby there is a line of sails (probably just cruising sails for now) that have a deposit paid on them by the customers that is redeemable on a new sail at the end of the old's working life.
The idea being an incentive to get end users to return their sails for reclamation of the fibres and raw materials specifically for them to then be re-manufactured into new cloth and rings etc for a circular or closed loop type of manufacturing process. Based on Ellen MacArthur's very amazing work http://www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/circular-economy
The hope is that this system will create at a minimum of 50% less landfill of old non biodegradable plastic sails, a massive reduction of new oil based fiber manufacture etc. It would also mean that any scrap materials at manufacture that normally get land filled, would be incorporated in the circular reclamation.
The reason I post here is that I know the sailmaking industry is keen to do it, but how do the public feel about this proposal?
Potentially (although no framework has been made yet) the customer would bear an initial extra one off cost to join the system in the form of a deposit. This is then applied to the cost of the next sail and so on. Obviously there is far more work for the sailmakers as they have to strip and separate all of the individual components of each returned sail.
The other thing to consider is that the sails might well need to initially (until processes improve) be a little heavier in weight in order to compensate for the lower tenacity of the recycled yarns. This is the reason for stating cruising sails would probably be the first to line of manufacturing to see this circular economy type production. However, I feel most cruisers would be happy to have a heavier cloth in the knowledge that the sail is basically going to produce little or no waste ever again and is using a fraction of the amount of oil to produce it.
Please let me know your thoughts on this proposal.
Thanks, Andrew