Circularity
What an economy throws away, returned as material.
Our premise is simple and demanding. The inputs industry depends on can be recovered from the waste stream and remanufactured, without giving up quality or scale.
The thesis
The materials an economy depends on can be made from what it throws away, at quality and at scale.
This is an industrial proposition, not an environmental gesture. Every tonne we recover and reprocess is a tonne of finished material that did not have to come from primary extraction. That holds because the output meets specification.
How we hold the line
Three principles.
Material, not waste
What enters the waste stream is unrealised material. We treat it as feedstock with value, not refuse to be managed.
Quality is the constraint
Circularity only matters if the output performs. We hold reclaimed material to the standard of primary input. Anything less is diversion, not manufacturing.
Scale is the point
A closed loop has to run at industrial volume to count. We are built to process at scale, not as a demonstration.
Closing the loop
A loop that ends where it began.
Recovered, reprocessed, returned to industry, used, and recovered again. The same path runs for every stream Faber handles.
- 01
Recovered
Material is taken out of the waste stream.
- 02
Reprocessed
Sorted, cleaned, and converted to specification.
- 03
Returned
Finished output goes back into manufacture.
- 04
Recovered again
At end of life, it re-enters the loop.
