Categories: Tech NewsTechCrunch+

Transforming old cardboard boxes into insulation nets CleanFiber $10 million round

It’s the middle of the holiday season here in the U.S., that magical time between Thanksgiving and Christmas when stores are packed with bodies and porches are piled with packages.

All those packages produce a lot of waste — anywhere from 33 million tons to 51 million tons annually, depending on the estimate. A majority of it gets recycled, but there’s still a significant fraction that finds its way into landfills.

One startup has a plan to slash that fraction while also cutting the carbon footprint of people’s homes. Buffalo-based CleanFiber takes used cardboard boxes and turns them into cellulose insulation that can be blown into the walls and attics of new and existing homes.

Advertisement

As building products go, cellulose insulation is pretty special. Because it’s insulation, it lowers energy use. It’s relatively high-performance and low-cost. And it’s made almost entirely from recycled materials, which means it lowers a building’s embodied carbon, or how much pollution is wrapped up in its materials.

Typically, cellulose insulation is made by shredding old newspapers, but as the newspaper industry has declined over the last 20 years, so too has the supply of newsprint.

“At one point in time, there were about 13 million tons of newsprint produced annually in North America,” CleanFiber CEO Jonathan Strimling told TechCrunch. Today, “it’s on the order of 1 million tons and continues to fall.”

Advertisement

That decline got industry insiders interested in using corrugated boxes in lieu of newsprint. But they knew they couldn’t reuse the same processes. Bales of newsprint are pretty homogeneous, whereas bales of old corrugated containers are laced with shipping labels, plastic sleeves, and various kinds of tape. Simply shredding that and sending it through a cellulose blower would gum up the works and make for some very unhappy installers.

Transforming old cardboard boxes into insulation nets CleanFiber $10 million round by Tim De Chant originally published on TechCrunch

Advertisement
Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Securing phpMyAdmin Like a Pro: Essential Tips and Tricks

Securing phpMyAdmin is crucial to prevent unauthorized access and protect your databases. Here's a guide…

5 months ago

Pasqal raises $100M to build a neutral atom-based quantum computer

Pasqal, a Paris-based quantum computing startup, today announced that it has raised a $100 million…

1 year ago

Apple in talks with Disney, others on VR content for new headset: Report

Developed with Sony Group Corp, the headset will have two ultra-high-resolution displays to handle the…

1 year ago

Microsoft, Amazon results to highlight softening cloud business

After years of blistering growth, most recently fuelled by remote working and studying during the…

1 year ago

Intel chairman Omar Ishrak steps down

Omar Ishrak had stepped down and the chipmaker appointed board director Frank Yeary as his…

1 year ago

Canada to commercialise world's first photonic-based quantum computer

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced a new federal investment to build and commercialise…

1 year ago