Adidas has sold 1 million pairs of sneakers made from ocean trash — and reveals a new normal in footwear
Business Insider, 17 March 2018
By Dennis Green
The UltraBoost sneaker from Adidas' Parley ocean plastic collection.
The company revealed in March that is has made and sold more than one million pairs of its shoes
made from ocean plastic. These shoes use a yarn developed by Parley that turns the ocean plastic
into a polymer that can used to construct knitted footwear.
Looking at the shoes, they are nearly indistinguishable from a normal pair of Adidas shoes, but the
hidden benefits of how they're made could have lasting implications on the future of footwear.
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One million shoes is obviously not very many compared to the millions and millions the company
sells on a yearly basis, and the company has been selling the Parley partnership shoes for almost
two years now. Still, one million is not a small number, and indicates that the demand is material.
Adidas started its partnership with Parley in 2016 with a limited run, but drastically doubled down
on it in 2017 with a full collection.
Each shoe uses an average of 11 plastic bottles per pair and incorporates recycled plastic into the
shoe's laces, heel webbing, heel lining, and sock liner covers.
Adidas isn't the only one that is doubling down on sustainability. The comfort-focused Allbirds,
known for their sneakers made from wool, just released a shoe made from eucalyptus tree fiber.
The company boasts that this new material is a rethinking of what material can be made from
shoes, and is much more sustainable than traditional methods.
Both of Allbirds collections, in fact, are made from predominantly naturally occurring materials.
Allbirds' has seen some success too, and revealed that they've sold one million pairs so far of their
wool shoes.
Allbirds shoes made with its new Tree material, made with eucalyptus tree fiber.
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Not to be outdone, the world's largest sportswear company, Nike, has started rethinking the
materials it uses to make shoes. Much of its collections are leather or petroleum based-knits, but a
new shoe material it developed recycled leather fiber.
Called Flyleather, it bonds together left over pieces of hide forming a new material. This reduces
waste in Nike's own processes, and makes it creating its traditional leather product more
sustainable as well.
Nike says it's the company's "lowest carbon-footprint leather material ever," but still feels like
perfect premium leather.
Sustainable footwear has many obvious benefits. It's a recycling initiative which the company can
use to boast about its green eco-friendly efforts, as well as a way to cut down waste.
But it's also a big bet that this is how all companies will be making shoes in the future when the
traditional petroleum-heavy methods become far too costly. It's a glimpse at a sustainable future,
where sneakers made from ocean plastic won't just be limited to special collections.
A shoe made from Nike's Flyleather.
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