Fairmat raises 8.6 million euros to put technology at the service of high-tech material recycling
Benjamin Saada, the co-founder of Expliseat, is launching his new start-up, a pioneer in the development of disruptive technologies for the recycling of high-tech materials. It aims to create one of the first circular industries with a negative carbon footprint for large-scale applications and deliver high-environmental impact.
Benjamin Saada, the co-founder of Expliseat, is launching Fairmat, a deeptech company aiming for “zero waste” and a final stop of composite materials’ landfills by creating a recycled and negative carbon footprint material that manufacturers can use in a vast array of products. This ambition will revolutionize the high-tech materials industry, which uses are constantly increasing whilst there are paradoxically very few ecological solutions adapted to their end-of-life.
Fairmat announces end of September, an €8.6 million fundraising to industrialize its proprietary technology of recycling carbon fiber composite (CFC). Singular led this first-round funding alongside business angels, including tech entrepreneurs and captains of industry, who will accompany Fairmat in this first stage of its development.
A disruptive technology suited for a fast-growing market
Fairmat wants to revolutionize the composite materials industry with a disruptive technology that will create a light and strong high-tech material designed to be used in almost all industries. This material is produced from carbon fiber production waste coming from many sectors – wind energy, aviation, automotive – and will avoid their landfilling or incineration, as it is still the case most of the time. Although fully aware of this issue, industries using carbon fiber composites are still struggling to find solutions. Indeed, the volume of carbon fiber composite waste is constantly increasing. It is estimated at nearly 62,000 tons worldwide each year, excluding the tons from the dismantling at the application’s end-of-life. Fairmat aims to recycle these high-added-value waste materials that are neither sorted nor recovered but sent to landfills. The company thus creates the first high-tech and recycled material with a negative carbon footprint.
Thanks to its proprietary technology, Fairmat is disrupting the industry by expanding the applications of this high value-added material by creating an authentic fair-trade material, saving 41 kilos of CO2 emissions per kilo of recycled material. Fairmat thus proposes an ecological alternative to all production materials and responds to the environmental and sustainable development challenges which manufacturers are facing. The CFC market alone represented 160,000 metric tons produced in 2020. Carbon fiber composite is a material that provides immense and indispensable services to the planet, for example, by allowing the storage of hydrogen in cars or to manufacture wind turbines.
Deeptech for a more sustainable industry
Fairmat has developed a technological process that contributes to carbon fiber-based composites production sustainability, thus giving a high value-added material a second life. Until now, most of the end-of-life composites were incinerated or buried.
Fairmat will rely on numerous technologies (artificial intelligence, robotics, algorithms, computer vision, etc.) to bring this solution to reality, significantly reduce its production cost, and offer new applications which will benefit the planet to many stakeholders in industries such as design, mobility, electronics, construction, transport, and logistics.
Production launch planned for 2022
Benjamin Saada, founder of Fairmat said:
“When I took a closer look at the recycling of this material, I realized that it was not at all recycled ecologically. I wanted to work on a technology that would meet the sustainability goals required to transform industries. In 2021, we will finally be able to make this high value-added material circular in a much more virtuous way, thanks to new technologies. We have a major challenge ahead of us: to recycle a huge market that will continue to grow in the coming years. Thanks to the trust of Singular and our investors, we will quickly make our environmentally friendly material available to our industrial customers,”
This first round of financing will increase the level of maturity of the technologies developed by Fairmat in recycling composite materials. Fairmat plans to launch the production of its high value-added recycled material in 2022. In this perspective, the deeptech has already signed its first recycling contracts in France. Thus, Fairmat is aiming for a capacity of 5,000 tons of recycled material annually in its first production site.
Raffi Kamber, Singular’s co-founder, said:
“Benjamin Saada is a well-known figure in the world of industrial innovation. After revolutionizing the aeronautics industry with the world’s lightest airplane seat, he is now tackling the valorization of a strategic material for the planet with the creation of Fairmat. The ambition of the Fairmat team immediately attracted us, and we are thrilled to be able to support the first steps of this future major player of the deeptech in Europe and the world.”