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France: High-tech flax and hemp - from car panels to lightweight concrete

French Technology Press Bureau

Tuesday 09 Mar 2004

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While textile flax produced in France is exported all over the world for
the production of high-quality linen clothes and sheets, these natural
fibres are now being re-discovered by French manufacturers and put to
unexpected and exciting uses.

Increasingly, flax is being used by automotive equipment manufacturers as a
source of raw material that is environmentally friendly and less dangerous
- in the event of a vehicle crashing - when used for interior panels in
cars. Hemp fibres are also employed in industry to provide rigidity for
plastics and in buildings as a natural insulator.

Near Yvetot, in Normandy (in North-Western France), newly-formed company
Techni-Lin processes flax fibre into interior panels for car doors.
Automotive equipment manufacturers are very interested in natural fibres to
make their cars environmentally friendlier and easier to recycle.

In Chemille, in the Maine-et-Loire region (in Western France), Effireal
manufactures hemp wool from hemp fibres produced by farmers in the Aube
region of Eastern France. The fibres are prepared and cleaned by the
Chanvriere de l'Aube co-operative company. More and more home owners are
looking for natural materials to insulate their properties and are starting
to value and appreciate this new use for hemp.

Flax-polypropylene - a winning combination

Textile flax is a plant widely cultivated in Northern France for the
manufacture of yarn and textiles which are exported all over the world. But
not all the fibres in flax are of the same quality. 'We were looking for a
new market, different from that of woven textiles or paper making, to
exploit the lower quality fibre,' explains Remi Dubost, a farmer in
Seine-Maritime and the president of flax-hackling co-operative Centrale
Liniere Cauchoise. (The word 'hackling' comes from 'hackle', referring here
to the steel comb used for dressing flax.) 'We came up with the idea of
introducing flax fibre into composites.'

The heads of the co-operative from Yvetot had met by chance some automotive
equipment manufacturers who quickly became interested in their approach,
and this is how Techni-Lin came to life in 1995, in the form of a
subsidiary set up by the co-operative. 'We took two years to develop our
product fully,' explains Francois Asselin, manager at Techni-Lin. 'It is a
composite material made from a mixture of 50% polypropylene [PP] fibre and
50% flax fibre. The ratio of the mixture can also be 60%-40% or 70%-30%'.
This new material is manufactured in Techni-Lin's factory.

Flax units fitted in 2,000 vehicles a day

From 1996, demand gradually increased and, in July 2000, the company
installed a new production line and its own thermo-pressing machine. Today,
it provides the interior door panels for the Opel Corsa and the Citroen C5
as well as the rear parcel shelf for the Renault Twingo. In 2002,
Techni-Lin processed no less than 800 metric tonnes of flax fibre and
provided the interior door panels for an impressive total of 2,000 vehicles
per day.

'Flax is appreciated because it is a very strong natural fibre, which
prevents the panel from breaking in the event of an accident,' points out
Francois Asselin. 'It also has the advantage of reducing the weight of the
finished product by 20% while yielding cost benefits.' To enter this
market, Techni-Lin had to meet the very rigid requirements of the
automotive industry with regard to quality assurance. Indeed, in a few
months, the start-up became an approved supplier to the automotive industry
(EAQF), was ISO 9002-certified, and also obtained AQP (Product Quality
Assurance) quality certification.

For Francois Asselin, there is no doubt that the market can only grow. 'In
Europe, there is a wealth of interest in composites made from natural
fibres,' he says. 'Other industries are also interested in this type of
product. For example, a designer has just produced his first table from one
of our composites.'

Hemp - a natural insulator also used for making lightweight concrete

Industrial hemp is also grown in France, but traditionally for the paper
industry. (It should be pointed out that industrial hemp, as distinct from
Indian hemp, contains, according to French regulations, less than 0.2% THC,
the psychotropic substance present in Indian hemp.) The search for more
natural products in all sectors of activity was taken up by hemp producers
and especially by the Chanvriere de l'Aube co-operative - a group of
slightly more than 300 hemp farmers in Eastern France, who process the
production from 6,000 hectares of hemp.

'We were looking for markets for our products and we investigated the
possibility of manufacturing hemp-wool as an insulator for homes, as an
alternative to glass-wool or rock-wool,' explains Yves Betrencourt, the
co-operative's sales manager. 'We met companies interested in this use of
hemp, such as Effireal and Natilin (in Western France) and Buitex (near
Lyons). Trials quickly showed that hemp-wool exhibited the same insulating
properties as glass-wool. It even has the advantage, compared with
glass-wool or rock-wool, of regulating interior humidity, which brings
additional comfort in the home.

Hemp-wool does, however, have a disadvantage, in that it is quite
expensive, at E8 to E15 per m2, or 2.5 to 4 times as much as glass-wool.
'This product appeals to those who are concerned about the environment and
who are committed to using natural products in the construction of their
homes,' notes Pierre Barthelemy of Effireal. 'Many others are interested in
the idea of using natural fibres but are reluctant to pay the extra. For
hemp-wool to be used by everyone, we would need a certain amount of
assistance from the government, such as tax incentives, like those for
solar energy.'

Fibres from Chanvriere de l'Aube are also used for making insulating panels
and lightweight concrete. Indeed, the co-operative is in the process of
developing breeze-blocks containing hemp, and intends to file for a patent
shortly. 'Today, the building sector makes up 15% of our market, but I am
sure that it will represent much more in the future,' predicts Yves
Betrencourt. 'The market is still in its infancy.'

Hemp reinforces superior organic plastics

Hemp, like flax, is also used in the interior trim for cars. 'In this
market, natural fibres have great appeal for manufacturers since they weigh
only half as much as glass fibre, for which they are a substitute, and are
half its price,' says the spokesperson for Chanvriere de l'Aube. Similarly,
the co-operative has recently turned its attention to rigid plastics. To
enter this market, it formed, with Eurochanvre (a subsidiary of cereal
growers' co-operative Interval, in the Haute-Saone region), a company
called Agro Fibres Technologies Plasturgie (or AFT Plasturgie).

'We are still at the research and development stage with it, but the first
plastics reinforced with hemp fibre have already been tested and the first
products should be available [commercially] shortly,' says AFT manager
Gerard Mougin. 'The plastics manufacturing market is vast, and ranges from
computer cases through to household electrical products, and includes
plastic furnishings, vehicle dashboards, food crates, and moulded packaging
- the possibilities are endless.' The big advantage of natural fibres,
compared with glass fibre, lies in the fact that organic plastics are less
abrasive, easier to mould and cut and, above all, easier to recycle than
artificial (or conventional) plastics.


Box: Fibres at work

In the Techni-Lin factory, the natural flax fibre, bleached or coloured, is
mixed with polypropylene fibre. The mixture is homogenised and stretched
into a fine layer of non-woven fibres, and several dozen fibre layers
interlocked by needles constitute the mat. The mat is several millimetres
thick and weighs, depending on the products, between 150 and 3,000 g/m2. It
is cut up and then usually sent in this form to the equipment
manufacturers, who then thermo-press the finished product. For certain
models, Techni-Lin itself takes care of the compression stage of the process.

In its factory, Chanvriere de l'Aube separates the hemp fibres from the
central stem of the plant and the seeds. The fibres are sent to Effireal,
for instance, which then takes over. 'We work the fibres to obtain a
product to our requirements,' says Pierre Barthelemy at Effireal. 'We apply
to them a fire-retardant treatment, then mix them with some polyester. The
fibre sheet is then heated in an oven, which causes the polyester to fuse
and link the hemp fibres together.' Effireal markets the hemp-wool in the
same way as glass-wool is sold, in rolls that are 10 cm, 8 cm, or 6 cm thick.

Weitere Informationen: www.infotechfrance.com/london/

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