ZME Science on MSN
Scientists Just Found a Way to Spin Leftover Yeast From Beer Into Soft, Strong, Biodegradable Fabric
Penn State researchers say the stuff we throw away after making beer, wine, and even some medicines could help feed people ...
Sourcing Journal on MSN
Material World: Trove Adds Repairs, Mud Jeans Taps Tencel
Trove expands its circular platform with repair services as Mud Jeans debuts recycled-cotton denim blended with Tencel ...
The manufacturer of BioWrap, a pale green, single-use shrink wrap, claims the material breaks down in less than 5 years.
Sustainability has moved from a trend to a standard for modern businesses. You now face more pressure to show real care for ...
GlobalData on MSN
Why unified packaging standards remain out of reach
In theory, one set of packaging rules could make products easier to trade, recycle, and regulate worldwide; in practice, the ...
Postgraduate Class of 2025: Fashion Business School Exhibition, MA Fashion Entrepreneurship and Innovation student Sharon ...
Only about 9% of plastic is recycled. Most of the rest goes to landfills or ends up in the environment. FutureBio wants to ...
Tech Xplore on MSN
Fermentation waste used to make natural fabric
A pilot-scale production run and product lifecycle analysis revealed that fiber made from fermentation waste is stronger than ...
PCMC has intensified its crackdown on banned plastics, deploying inspection squads and imposing fines to enforce the state’s ...
Biotechnology is the exploitation of biological processes for the development of technologies and products for a specific use ...
Biodegradable fibers spun from yeast protein avoid the resource use and pollution of cotton, wool, and polyester ...
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