Collaborating with partners to upcycle chalk into carpet tile backing

Collaborating with partners to upcycle chalk into carpet tile backing

On our circular economy journey, Tarkett is always seeking to create healthier products that can be safely transformed into new ones, conserving natural resources and creating a positive impact on the environment. This often means collaborating with unlikely partners. In the Netherlands, we have established a world-first partnership with drinking water companies to upcycle waste chalk into stabiliser for our Cradle to Cradle Gold-certified EcoBase carpet backing.

Upcycled chalk waste,  chalk recovery

Sharing our ambition

With a longstanding commitment to Cradle to Cradle design principles, we know that it takes courage and determination to take the road less travelled. To encourage others to get involved, we held Cradle to Cradle events at our Waalwijk site, highlighting our ambition to scale up our use of recycled raw materials. “That’s how the director of a local water company came to tell us he had chalk residues available for our chalk-based EcoBase backing,” Ludwig Cammaert, Tarkett’s EMEA Director Design & Technical Development. “This was the beginning of an unlikely collaboration that completely transformed the way we source raw materials for EcoBase.” Previously, the waste chalk arising through the local drinking water treatment process was donated to farmers to use as fertiliser in their fields or as flooring for cattle sheds. The value of the chalk itself, as a material, was completely lost. Meanwhile, Tarkett was sourcing virgin chalk for its EcoBase backing from a mine in Northern France.

chalk recovery, upcycing chalk

Into the unknown

Tarkett’s research and development teams began working closely with Aqua Minerals, a Dutch drinking water industry partnership established to create value from water treatment waste. In particular, our engineers partnered with several companies, to achieve the exact composition and size of chalk particles for use in our backing and manufacturing processes. “Initially the particles we received were so hard that they blunted the blades of our carpet-cutting machinery,” adds Cammaert. “So we worked together to find a solution.

To create a softer particle, the teams exchanged the silica-based ‘seed’ around which the calcite (chalk) crystals form to a calcium carbonate seed. The end pellets supplied to Tarkett work much better on our production line, and can also be sold by Aqua Minerals to other industries. We have since patented this innovative process to re-engineer and upcycle calcium carbonate.

ecobase backing, carpet tiles

The partnership bears fruit

Our pioneering partnership to upcycle chalk from waste drinking water is helping to advance our circular economy journey and fulfil our renewable materials goals,” says Myriam Tryjefaczka, Tarkett’s Sustainability and Public Affairs Director. “By giving it a new lease of life as a raw material for a new product, the chalk continues to circulate in a ‘closed loop’, in line with Cradle to Cradle principles.

EcoBase now contains at least 80% chalk, derived from 100% positively defined recycled materials. Our circular collaboration played a key role in Ecobase first achieving Cradle to Cradle Gold certification in 2015. Most importantly, Ecobase can be 100% safely recycled within our own production process. In 2019, we used more than 15,000 tonnes of chalk from this waste stream for our carpet tiles, and we have used more than 84,000 tonnes to date.

Just another way we're
Doing Good. Together

More sustainable stories

Tarkett strives to eco-design all its products using Cradle to Cradle principles
Closing the loop on carpets in a European industry first.

In 2019, Tarkett closed the loop on carpet tiles produced in Europe and now recycles 100% of carpet tile materials. This is how we managed to overcome the challenges of carpet post-consumer recycling.

Tarkett helps to recycle previously unrecyclable PVB and uses it in flooring
Going for gold on climate action: The story behind a PVB recycling breakthrough

Learn about Tarkett's collaboration to recycle previously unrecyclable PVB and use it to produce innovative flooring solutions, giving it a second life.