The Textile Fibre Recycling Market is being transformed by advances in mechanical recycling technologies that process post-consumer and post-industrial textile waste into usable fibers, with the Europe Textile Fibre Recycling Market recorded a consumption of 1.7 million metric tons in 2024 and is estimated to reach a volume of 8.1 million metric tons by 2033 with a CAGR of 19.3% during the forecast period. Mechanical recycling – shredding, garneting, carding, and spinning – is the dominant technology for cotton-rich textiles (70%+ cotton content). The process begins with fabric shredding (rotary blade shredders reducing garments to 20-50mm fragments), then garneting (wire-covered cylinders separating fibers from fabric structure while maintaining length), carding (parallelizing fibers into a web), and spinning (converting web into yarn for new textiles). Mechanically recycled cotton fibers are shorter (8-15mm vs. virgin cotton 25-35mm) and weaker, limiting use to 20-30% blends with virgin cotton or polyester. Applications include denim (Levi's, G-Star, MUD Jeans), workwear, nonwovens (wipes, insulation, automotive interiors), and filling materials (mattresses, pillows, furniture). Major European mechanical recyclers include: Recover (Spain, part of Recover Textile Systems), Martex (Italy), Hilaturas Ferre (Spain), Retex (Denmark), and WeRet (Germany). The technology has limitations – fiber length degradation prevents closed-loop textile-to-textile recycling without virgin fiber blending, and blended fabrics (cotton-polyester, cotton-elastane, wool-acrylic) cannot be separated mechanically – the resulting fiber mixture has limited applications. However, innovation in mechanical separation (electrostatic, density, air classification) is improving blend separation. The Circular Economy for Textiles (CET) project (Horizon Europe) is developing mechanical-mechanical hybrid processes that achieve 50-60% recycled fiber content in new yarns (vs. 20-30% currently). The European textile industry has significant mechanical recycling capacity – 200+ facilities across EU, concentrated in Italy (Prato district, historic wool/rag recycling center), Spain (Catalonia), Germany (North Rhine-Westphalia), and Portugal (north).
The Europe Textile Fibre Recycling Market for mechanical recycling is also being shaped by nonwoven applications which tolerate shorter fibers and lower quality. Nonwovens (geotextiles, automotive insulation, acoustic panels, furniture padding, industrial wipers) are the largest outlet for mechanically recycled fibers, absorbing 40-50% of output. The Textile Fibre Recycling Market has responded with needlepunch and airlaid nonwoven lines designed specifically for recycled fibers. Textile Fibre Recycling Market report indicates that mechanical recycling accounts for 65% of European textile recycling volume (1.1 million tons in 2024), projected to decline to 50% by 2033 (4.05 million tons) as chemical recycling scales. Textile Fibre Recycling Market size for mechanical recycling is estimated at €800 million-1.2 billion annually. The Textile Fibre Recycling industry has innovated in fabric-to-fabric recycling without fiber length loss – enzyme-assisted mechanical recycling (cellulase enzymes gently remove surface fibrils, preserving core fiber length) achieves 15-20mm fiber length (approaching virgin cotton length). Textile Fibre Recycling Market opportunity exists in industrial post-consumer textile waste – uniforms (hotel, airline, healthcare, corporate) are collected in large volumes (often 100% cotton or polyester-cotton blends) with known fiber composition, enabling tailored recycling processes. Textile Fibre Recycling Market trends include RFID-tagged workwear (CINTAS, Aramark, Elis) enabling lifecycle tracking – garments are returned, sorted by composition, and recycled at end-of-life, creating a closed-loop uniform system. Textile Fibre Recycling Market analysis reveals that mechanical recycling has lower capital cost (€2-5 million for a 5,000 tons/year line) and operating cost (€300-600/ton) than chemical recycling (€20-50 million capital, €800-1,500/ton operating), making it more accessible for SME-scale recyclers. Textile Fibre Recycling Market volume from mechanical processes is expected to reach 4.05 million tons by 2033, up from 1.1 million in 2024. Textile Fibre Recycling Market forecast anticipates that fiber-to-fiber mechanical recycling for denim (cotton-rich, relatively uniform) will achieve 50% recycled content by 2028-2030, with G-Star, Mud Jeans, and MUD leading. Textile Fibre Recycling Market share of mechanical recyclers: Recover (Spain) 15%, Martex (Italy) 10%, Hilaturas Ferre (Spain) 8%, Retex (Denmark) 5%, others 62%. The 19.3% CAGR reflects mechanical recycling scaling with collection volumes.

