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Brands don't prioritise sustainability "unless they see dollar signs" says Benjamin Hubert

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Benjamin Hubert portrait

Leading design brands need to stop valuing affordability over sustainability or risk becoming obsolete, according to Layer founder Benjamin Hubert.

Despite a growing number of companies touting their environmental initiatives, the designer revealed that in product development meetings "cost is always the conversation".

"Unless you can stand up in front of the C-suite of a company and justify how something generates the same or more revenue, then the sustainability question isn't even considered," Hubert explained.

"The reality is, particularly for big companies, unless they can see dollar signs next to advancements it's very difficult to get them to trade off."

Hula 46 by Benjamin Hubert for Andreu World
Benjamin Hubert (top image) has designed the Hula 46 stool for Andreu World (above)

To make a difference, designers have to learn to advocate for the necessary material innovation and retooling from a business perspective, he said, and actively seek out companies that are willing to make these investments.

"I think the thought leaders will lead and everyone else will follow," he said. "So it's about finding and engaging with the right people."

"Anybody that's not doing it now or thinking about it will end up being behind the curve. They have to be doing it now or they die."

Andreu World among brands investing in materials

The designer made the comments as part of a live Dezeen panel talk with Andreu World CEO Jesús Llinares to mark the launch of the brand's new book Conversations About Work, which looks at the working practices of eight renowned designers.

Hubert is featured alongside Patricia Urquiola and Philippe Starck after collaborating with the Spanish furniture brand on the Hula stool and the upcoming Triada table, both made from infinitely recyclable aluminium.

Andreu World is among the companies that have increased their investment in research and development in recent years, Llinares explained, with the aim of making its entire product catalogue circular by 2025.

"We are hoping to use materials that are 100 per cent recycled and 100 per cent recyclable," he said.

With this aim, the company launched three proprietary materials last year including a thermoplastic called Pure ECO and a synthetic yarn called Circular ONE, both made from recycled plastic and recyclable at the end of their life.

The final material is BIO, a bioplastic synthesised by living microorganisms, which the brand claims is both recyclable and compostable as well as having a carbon footprint equivalent to that of wood.

"Now, it's only available in some colours but in the next few years, we want to do it for the whole catalogue," Llinares said.

"We want to work through the designs that we have in our actual portfolio one by one to see how we can optimise the circularity."

Production will be carbon neutral by 2025

Whether the final products are considered circular will depend on how often they can be recycled and whether they are recycled at all, which is only the case for around nine per cent of plastics globally.

Unlike companies such as Takt and Sebastian Cox, Andreu World has not shared a goal for reaching net-zero emissions as a business in line with the targets set out in the Paris Agreement.

But the brand has committed itself to making its production carbon neutral by 2025.

Benjamin Hubert sat at a desk with a notebook
Hubert is the founder of London studio Layer

Beyond moving away from virgin and fossil fuel-based materials, this will see Andreu World switch to all renewable energy by the end of next year and build a dedicated solar farm for its new production centre, which is set to open in early 2022.

"Sustainability for us is mandatory," Llinares explained. "There is no choice."

"Obviously, companies have to be economic but that's the challenge," he continued. "And it's a beautiful challenge."

The post Brands don't prioritise sustainability "unless they see dollar signs" says Benjamin Hubert appeared first on Dezeen.

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