Syre plans to build 'gigascale' textile recycling plant in central Vietnam

The 1-billion-USD project will focus on recycling polyester textile waste into high-quality PET pellets used as raw materials for the spinning and garment industries, the Vietnam Investment Review reported.

Syre is accelerating plans to build its first gigascale plant, scheduled to break ground in Gia Lai province in 2027. (Photo: baodautu.vn)
Syre is accelerating plans to build its first gigascale plant, scheduled to break ground in Gia Lai province in 2027. (Photo: baodautu.vn)

Hanoi (VNA) - Swedish textile recycling company Syre is accelerating plans to develop a global network of recycling plants, with its first gigascale factory expected to break ground in 2027 in central Gia Lai province of Vietnam.

The 1-billion-USD project will focus on recycling polyester textile waste into high-quality PET pellets used as raw materials for the spinning and garment industries, the Vietnam Investment Review reported.

Recently, Syre announced a multi-year partnership with global sports brand NIKE, Inc., a step that advances the development of a circular materials economy in the apparel sector. The plant, described as 'gigascale,' capable of processing tens of thousands of tonnes of textile waste annually, represents a major milestone for sustainable production in Vietnam.

The partnership reflects Nike’s commitment to scaling sustainable innovation and Syre’s mission to accelerate the great textile shift. It will focus on step-by-step integration of Syre’s circular polyester into core Nike performance lines, with the first products expected within the next few years. Syre will be Nike’s lead strategic supplier for textile-to-textile recycled polyester.

The companies share a long-term ambition to expand the use of textile-derived fibres, supporting a closed-loop ecosystem where end-of-life textiles become the feedstock for the next generation of performance gear.

The partnership with Syre represents a shift in the company’s materials strategy and how it sources, said Sitora Muzafarova, Vice President of Materials Supply Chain at Nike. Innovation is at the heart of Nike’s DNA, and textile-to-textile recycled polyester is essential in the company’s ambition to design and produce products that both perform to the highest standards that athletes expect and are more sustainable at the same time, he added.

For Syre, the partnership with one of the world’s most iconic brands marks a new chapter in scaling true circularity.

Having Nike, the global leader in sportswear and innovation, commit to textile-to-textile generated polyester sends a powerful signal to the entire industry. This is not a one-off initiative or capsule collection, this is a moment when circular materials move from concept to commercial reality at scale and wider adoption, said Dennis Nobelius, CEO of Syre.

As Syre ramps up the planning for a global network of recycling plants, with Vietnam chosen as the location for its first large-scale facility, this partnership further strengthens the foundation for its global expansion. It also adds significant momentum to Syre’s growing customer line up, which already includes H&M Group and the Launch Partners, GAP Inc., Houdini Sportswear, and Target, announced earlier this year.

With an investment capital of 1 billion USD, Syre's gigascale textile-to-textile recycling plant in Vietnam aims to process textile waste into regenerated polyester fibre, positioning Vietnam as a global hub for circular textile production.

The partnership between Syre and Nike is even more meaningful given that Vietnam is currently Nike’s largest global supplier, with 171 factories employing more than 480,000 workers (as of September 2025).

Vietnam is responsible for producing around 50% of Nike's global output and around 28% of Nike's clothing products. This large scale strengthens a sustainable supply chain, while also providing an ideal foundation for integrating Syre’s recycled materials into Nike's Vietnamese-made products./.

VNA

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