CIRCULAR TRUCK TARP
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Media release, September 4, 2024
Together with industry partners, FREITAG is developing a circular truck tarp that can be recycled after completing its second life as a FREITAG bag and thus ends up back in the loop. The first prototype has now completed its two-year test drive on a delivery van. At the same time, work continued apace on various material combinations. Both are bearing fruit: A fleet of trucks fitted with circular tarps recently has been undergoing an endurance test on the road.
FREITAG thinks and acts in cycles. This corporate philosophy manifests itself time and again in the successful closing of cycles. The most recent example was the Mono[PA6] Backpack, the first recyclable FREITAG backpack made without truck tarp from a single material. But one question arises again and again: What will it take to ensure that the truck tarps used to make most of the iconic bags and accessories will one day be circular and no longer end up as waste?
The answer is as simple as it is challenging: FREITAG will develop a circular truck tarp. And it will do that with various industrial partners in the materials, chemicals and composite sectors, as well as manufacturers, logistics companies and institutions in the materials-testing sectors and recycling industry. They all share the same vision and see the potential of the circular economy, which is why they work collectively and financially independently of each other. The search for the tarp of the future, which can one day be broken down into its basic constituents and recycled, was officially launched in fall 2021. Just one year later, the first prototypes were mounted on a delivery van and sent out on a two-year test drive. These pioneering tarps recently completed their maiden voyage, returned to FREITAG and are now providing valuable insights into the properties of the material and its recyclability.
First truck test fleet on the road Meanwhile, the search for the perfect material continued in the background, and the work is bearing fruit: two sub-projects are now ready for the endurance test. And that’s why the circular tarps are now traveling around in convoys. In Planzer, a Swiss logistics company, FREITAG has found a partner in the road freight industry that fitted out six of its trucks and five trailers with two different test tarps. These will be on the road for varying lengths of time. By staggering the test periods, the material’s aging process can be tracked more precisely under everyday conditions. Thanks to the large amount of material involved, it will soon be possible to test downstream bag production steps, such as washing, cutting, and sewing at FREITAG, as well as the necessary approaches to recycling. Bieri Tenta AG, who are responsible for printing using the stencil printing process and equipping the tarps, invested many hours in extensive material tests to ensure they could be processed and carry signage. The made-to-measure tarp company drew on its extensive supplier network to realize the test fleet. Certain PES/TPU-compatible accessories were unavailable, so Bieri simply produced the necessary pasts themselves. For the lettering, the company opted for a highly flexible stencil printing ink and successfully overcame the challenge posed by the ink’s long drying time.
Material streams: two solutions already well advanced Like its conventional predecessors, the new circular tarp will have a rugged base fabric and a soft, water- and dirt-repellent coating. Since the project kicked off in 2021, several possible material combinations have emerged that have been the focus of research by the various partners. Two highly advanced approaches are currently being put through their paces on the test fleet: PES/TPU and PP/PP.
PES/TPU: ADVANCED AND TESTED The printed tarps attached to the sides of the test vehicles were manufactured by Heytex, a German-based company, from a polyester (PES) fabric coated with a thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU) developed by materials specialists Covestro. The properties of this material combination have been vastly improved. The PES/TPU tarp has not only passed the EPEA* material health test, but already meets ISO side-curtain standards for 40-tonne trucks. Further development of the material has also improved its printability, handling characteristics and suitability for additional processing, all critical issues for the road freight industry and FREITAG. FREITAG is currently evaluating recycling processes for TPU/PES tarps with Covestro and Swiss recycling company DePoly SA.
PP/PP: A LOW-PRICE MONO-MATERIAL The base fabric and outer coating of the tarps used for the roofs of the trucks and trailers is made of polypropylene (PP). This approach is convincing at several levels The PP/PP tarp is called Rivercyclon. It is a mono-material that is recyclable without the need for complex material separation and it is cost-effective. Initially, the material’s printability posed a challenge, but in the meantime the first successful digital prints have been completed together with tests with silkscreen and stencil prints. Dutch tarp manufacturer Rivertex is in charge of this approach, which holds an EPEA Circularity Passport® testifying to its high material health and recyclability.
OTHER APPROACHES The main focus is currently on the two approaches mentioned, but work also continues on other solutions, and FREITAG is closely following developments on the market. Some players, for instance, focus on mono-material tarps made of PET/PET or TPU/TPU. FREITAG is also keeping a close eye on a promising research project involving several participants working on the development of a bio-based tarp. However, none of these approaches is yet mature enough for testing.
Marketability and success factors It is not yet clear which of the various material combinations will result in commercially viable, circular truck tarps in the future. Apart from the enormous demands placed on the tarp regarding quality and circularity, marketability will play a decisive role in the project’s success. At a large round table meeting, FREITAG drafted various possible business models together with all the partners involved, but a precisely defined business case is still a long way off. The aim is to build a coherent and dynamic network that enables us to keep products and materials of the highest possible quality in circulation. Demonstrating the tarps’ circularity will be a crucial factor in making them successful, as will the information flow.
Transparency thanks to Circularity Passport® and the Digital Product Passport To prove that products fulfill circularity criteria, EPEA is developing the so-called Circularity Passport® Product (CPP). Taking this as its guideline, the organization checks and evaluates the entire system behind a circular product, all the materials used and their recyclability, and provides an overall assessment of the degree of circularity. But to guarantee product’s circularity, it must be proven and as much relevant information as possible provided. Only this way a reverse logistics network can be created, aimed at regenerating value from tarps at the end of their life, transforming them into highly desirable one-of-a-kind bags.
The introduction of the Digital Product Passport (DPP) for truck tarps with a comprehensive data protocol developed and implemented by FREITAG and Bieri therefore represents a significant innovation. This contains all relevant information and thus ensures greater transparency with regard to material composition, production and origin. On the other hand, the aim is to simplify processes along the value chain thanks to information about the manufacturer and tarp specialist, the tarp’s age, and the recycling stream into which the material will one day be fed. The digital product passport attached to the inside of the tarps in the form of prints, while an RFID chip and QR code will provide virtual information about the tarp. The test fleet is already equipped with this system: the RFID-enabled software solution SKPident accompanies production and enables tracking throughout the entire lifecycle of the circular tarpaulins.
*EPEA - Part of Drees & Sommer evaluates materials using the Cradle to Cradle® approach and focuses on all-around material health for humans and the environment, technical recyclability and the implementation of a take-back system.
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Media release, Zurich, June 1, 2022
FREITAG is working with various industrial partners to develop a truck tarpaulin that, even after a long second life as a FREITAG bag, doesn’t end up in the garbage but back in the cycle. Research is in progress with various material combinations, each with its own unique advantages and the potential to meet exacting demands in terms of circularity and robustness. Something that only a short while ago was considered a big idea is being put into action: The very first prototype of a circular tarp is now into its first round of testing by being mounted on a small truck.
Zurich, Switzerland, June 1, 2022 – Just under two years ago, FREITAG initiated the development of a new kind of tarpaulin that would fully meet circularity criteria. Like the bags that would one day be made from it, the new material would not be merely recycled but also endlessly recyclable. And that means the tarps must first withstand the harsh conditions encountered on Europe’s transit routes. Subsequently, like their predecessors, they will be used as the source of unique, durable FREITAG products. But at the end of their days as bags, they shouldn’t have to be burned. The idea is that they should be broken down into their basic constituents and used again to create new items.
For its venture into the industry upstream of its bag-making business, FREITAG has strengthened itself internally with materials experts and circularity specialists. We found a wide range of interested industrial partners with knowledge of materials, chemicals and composites. And then we brought them together at a round table with the German EPEA's circularity experts and long-standing partners from the tarpaulin business. At this phase of the project, FREITAG saw and continues to see itself mainly as a matchmaker and spiritual co-driver of the great tarp revolution.
Like a conventional tarpaulin, the new circular version will consist of a robust fabric with a water- and dirt-repellent coating. What precisely these two components will consist of is the all-important question. First and foremost, the new tarp will have to withstand the rigors of being on the road. After that, it must be possible to revert it to its basic building blocks and reuse them to make something new. As the project unfolded, various development approaches with different partners and combinations of fabrics and coatings emerged. These were further developed, tested, discarded and supplemented by the parties involved.
Currently, we have four promising sub-projects for a circular truck tarp on the big roundtable, all at widely differing stages of development:
It is, of course, a long stretch from a tarpaulin to a truck tarp. Which explains why Swiss tarp assembler Bieri came to be involved. They printed the designs on the Rivertex material, attached the straps and fitted it with eyelets so that the potential tarp revolution can also be firmly mounted on the small truck. So, now it’s making its rounds on the roads, come sun, wind or acid rain. This will show us how well the polypropylene material holds up as a truck tarp: whether it becomes brittle too quickly, for example, and not least whether and how well the tarp lettering adheres. This is vitally important not only for the haulage companies, but also for FREITAG. Because ultimately, one day, the tarps will be used to make the company’s much-sought-after unique bags.
At this point it is impossible to predict which of the four sub-projects and which materials will one day result in the first commercial, circular truck tarp. Perhaps there will be more than one alternative to the existing PVC tarp. After all, many highways lead to Milan, and at the moment no one knows which of them will be the fastest and cheapest way of getting to Rome. «While higher circularity may speak for one development approach, a lower material price may be the main argument for another», explains Anna Blattert, putting the current status of the various sub-projects into perspective. The know-how currently being gathered from the first prototype will soon benefit the other developments, as these are also being driven forward at full tilt. Parallel to this, discussions on suitable circular business models and processes are being intensified. Ultimately, we must ensure that the recyclable material at the end of one life cycle finds its way into the next and that the innovative circular tarps remain in an endless cycle instead of ending up in the trash.
FREITAG is very much looking forward to these next stages with its fantastic project partners and to many more successful test rounds. We can hardly wait to take apart the small prototype tarps and send them out on their test rounds as recyclable FREITAG bags in the next cycle of their lives.
More information: www.freitag.ch/circulartarp
Camera/Edit: Elias Bötticher
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Media release – Zurich, September 30, 2021
Zurich’s bag makers have had enough of half measures and cycles. So, in the future, to ensure their tarp bags aren’t merely recycled but are also endlessly recyclable, FREITAG is venturing outside the bag universe to work with selected industrial partners on the development of a truck tarpaulin that fully meets circularity criteria. FREITAG is looking forward to closing its own material cycle soon, and helping to make European road freight traffic just that little bit greener.
Zurich, Switzerland, September 30, 2021 – We think and act in cycles: it’s been FREITAG’s corporate philosophy for more than 25 years now. «Today, we’re focusing mainly on how we can give the road transport industry upstream of us a circular material. That would also enable us ourselves to act in endless cycles», specifies Daniel Freitag. In the case of textiles, FREITAG has already achieved this pioneering feat with a 100% compostable clothing line called F-ABRIC, which it developed from scratch.
After five to ten years on the road, and as part of FREITAG’s core business, truck tarps are given a new, long lease of life as bags. This is further extended by repair services and an online exchange platform. But at some point, even the toughest bag gives up the ghost. And when that finally happens, it’s down to the last exit to the garbage incineration plant. «In Zurich, this at least generates a bit of district heating for our tarp bag-making headquarters», says Markus Freitag. “But we’d doing one better, of course, if we could give discarded truck tarps not only a second life, but an everlasting one.”
A little over a year ago, FREITAG decided to set the wheels in motion and start developing a new type of tarpaulin that would meet strict circularity criteria. The envisaged material would, of course, be just as robust, durable, water-repellent and practical as the existing one made of PVC. Instead of ending up in the trash, the new tarp would eventually end up in a biological or technical cycle, which means that one day it will biologically decompose or be broken down into technical constituents from which new tarps or other products can be made.
As part of this quest in an as yet unknown area, FREITAG has now filled the internal role of «Circular Technologist» twice over. Using contacts such as trucking companies and tarpaulin assemblers from the company’s everyday operations, the project team trawled the tarp supply chain in search of interesting and interested partners who could bring the required expertise regarding materials, chemicals and composite to the table. Together with companies and institutions in the fields of circularity and materials testing, the resulting heterogeneous collective of highly motivated partners brings a flexible, goal-oriented, multi-track approach to the tarpaulin revolution. FREITAG’s role in this could best be described as that of a provider of ideas, inspirational force or spiritual co-driver.
Pretty soon, it became apparent that even a new circular tarp would be constructed similarly to existing materials. It would consist of a robust fabric and a soft, water- and dirt-repellent coating made of a synthetic or organically based plastic. The big question, then, still is: How can these two main components be broken down – jointly or separately – into their constituent parts and reused or composted? The collective has already found some partial answers to the question in possible materials and various compounds.
To ensure that each manufacturing step and chemical component genuinely meets circularity criteria, an innovation partner, EPEA – Part of Drees & Sommer, evaluates them using the Cradle to Cradle® method*. «By placing such an uncompromising demand on the concept of circularity, we are not exactly making things easy for ourselves», says Anna Blattert, one of two Circular Technologists employed by the Zurich bag manufacturers. Nevertheless, the team already has initial material prototypes – combinations of different fabrics and coating materials – at its disposal. In tests carried out so far, these have generated surprisingly positive results. «I’m particularly pleased to say that, in some cases, the biologically based coating material has outperformed even conventional synthetics in practical stress tests. We definitely want to stick to this path, even if it involves considerably more development work», explains Bigna Salzmann, likewise a Circular Technologist at FREITAG.
«The entire transport and logistics industry is confronted with disruptive changes. Autonomous trucks, digitization and electric propulsion are radically changing transport logistics. What the industry lacks is a closed-cycle material with future viability. That's where we spring into the breach. And as residual recyclers of the material, we are driven by a certain degree of self-interest», says Oliver Brunschwiler, Company Lead. FREITAG firmly believes that a circular form of tarpaulin will be a reality on transit routes in the foreseeable future and is doing all it can to ensure that a first tarp prototype can be fitted to a truck as early as 2022. All the same, it is difficult to predict when a fully circular tarpaulin will go into series production and when it will be possible to say that the truck tarp cycle has gone full circle. But if FREITAG has any say in the matter, it shouldn’t take much longer. After all, it will take at least another five long years of transit before bags can finally be cut from them: the first FREITAG bags to emerge from the closed tarpaulin cycle.
If you want to know more, you can find out everything that isn’t «tarp secret» (excuse the pun) at www.freitag.ch/circulartarp. And if you’re already looking forward to your first everlasting tarp bag, you won’t miss a trick if you have a subscription to the FREITAG newsletter.
*EPEA - Part of Drees & Sommer evaluates materials using the Cradle to Cradle® method, focusing on comprehensive material health for humans and the environment, technical recyclability and the implementation of a take-back system.