Swancor, Ban Mao Green Coating Turn Composites Waste Into Lightweight Construction Materials

Swancor, Ban Mao Green Coating Turn Composites Waste Into Lightweight Construction Materials

CompositesWorld
CompositesWorldMar 30, 2026

Why It Matters

Eco‑Stone demonstrates that high‑performance construction materials can be sourced from composite waste, reducing landfill pressure and embodied carbon while complying with rigorous safety codes.

Key Takeaways

  • Swancor's CleaVER recycles carbon fiber waste into oligomers.
  • Eco‑Stone contains 11% recycled oligomers, mimics natural stone.
  • Process generates zero liquid waste and low carbon footprint.
  • Product offers fire and earthquake resistance for Taiwan market.
  • First circular‑economy raw material used by Ban Mao coatings.

Pulse Analysis

The global surge in wind‑turbine installations has created a mounting stream of carbon‑fiber prepreg waste, a material traditionally destined for landfill or energy‑intensive incineration. Swancor Regener, the composites‑recycling arm of Swancor Holding, tackles this challenge with its patented CleaVER process, which chemically depolymerises cured thermoset matrices into high‑purity resin oligomers while recovering intact fibers. Unlike conventional methods, the process emits no liquid effluent, requires no additional equipment, and delivers a quantifiable reduction in carbon emissions. By turning a liability into a feedstock, Swancor positions itself at the forefront of the circular‑economy movement in advanced materials.

The partnership with Taiwan’s Ban Mao Green Coating has translated that chemistry into a market‑ready product called Eco‑Stone, a lightweight panel that mimics natural stone while embedding 11 % recycled oligomers. Engineered for the stringent fire‑rating and seismic standards of Taiwanese construction, the panels combine durability with a low‑carbon footprint, offering architects a sustainable alternative without compromising performance. Ban Mao’s extensive portfolio in public‑works and façade coatings accelerates Eco‑Stone’s entry into high‑visibility projects such as museums and civic buildings, demonstrating that recycled composites can meet, and even exceed, conventional material specifications.

Eco‑Stone’s debut at JEC World 2026 signals a broader shift toward integrating reclaimed composites into the built environment. As building codes worldwide tighten around embodied carbon and waste reduction, developers are likely to seek similar solutions that align with ESG goals and cost‑effectiveness. Swancor’s scalable CleaVER platform, already applied to sporting goods, electric‑vehicle bodies, and robotics, suggests a versatile supply chain that can serve multiple sectors. If adoption accelerates, the construction industry could divert millions of kilograms of thermoset waste annually, delivering measurable environmental benefits and new revenue streams for recyclers.

Swancor, Ban Mao Green Coating turn composites waste into lightweight construction materials

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