How to win a social innovation challenge?

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Transcript of How to win a social innovation challenge?

Marjaana Tanttu

Michael Hummel

Global Change Award Team

8.12.2016

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8.12.2016

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SOURCE: Finnish Forest Industries Federation

Start of the

Future Biorefinery

program

2009

End Product

4

FabricYarnFiberPulpWoodForest

Textile chain

Core group 2009

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FiberPulp

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Three leading universities in their own fields became Aalto University in 2010

Helsinki School of Economics (HSE)

University of Art and Design Helsinki (TaiK)

Helsinki University of Technology (TKK) The Aalto Universitycommunity:

75,000 alumni,20,000 students,

5,000 staff members, 350 professors

Aalto University

7

Töölö

School of

Business

Otaniemi

• School of Engineering

• School of Electrical

Engineering

• School of Science

• School of Chemical

Technology

Arabia

School of Arts, Design

and Architecture

End ProductFabricYarn

Growing team – Expanding competences

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FiberPulp

Designer’s role in this collaboration

Photo: Eeva Suorlahti

Setting & controlling the textile process

Photo: Eeva Suorlahti

Prototyping &

”demo products”

& giving

feedback

Display &

communication

Photo: Eeva Suorlahti

Photo:

Eeva Suorlahti

Bringing right

people together

& giving

feedback

Envisioning

the

future

Photo: Cindy Kohtala

End ProductFabricYarn

Growing team – Expanding competences

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FiberPulpWaste

Design-driven world of cellulose

Special emphasis on the use of paper

and cardboard as raw material

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DWoCDesign Driven Value Chains in

the World of Cellulose

Paper/Board Pulp Fiber Yarn Fabric Dyed fabric

Trash-2-Cash

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This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020

research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 646226.

Trash-2-Cash

www.trash2cashproject.eu

@EUtrash2cash

Drivers:

• The European Community is limiting the quantity of organic

material that can be sent to landfill through legislation,

reinforcing the need to address the huge challenge of textile

waste.

• The textile industry is the 5th largest contributor to CO2

emissions in Europe and USA1

• 3.5 years project, 18 partners from 10 countries

→ even bigger team

→ closing the loop1Energy Information Administration, Form EIA:848, “2002 Manufacturing Energy Consumption Survey” Form EIA:810, “Monthly Refinery Report” (for 2002) and Documentation for Emissions of Greenhouse Gases in the United States 2003 (May 2005) http://www.eia.doe.gov/emeu/aer/txt/ptb1204.html).

• To achieve materials

innovation by involving the

entire supply chain in

collaboration – not just

science, design or

manufacturing in isolation

• To design for recycling –

with an emphasis on new

products becoming a future

material source themselves

when discarded

Trash-2-Cash objectives

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Making waste-cotton new