Although all the used Benjie shoes you bring back to us are fully recycled (except for the metal), for the moment we have limited ourselves to the production of the soles, which are only made up of 40% crushed shoes. For strength's sake, we still need to incorporate other materials, albeit recycled, which puts a brake on our circularity approach.
So all this is just a small step. To achieve a 100% recycling loop, we'll have to completely reinvent the design of the shoe and, to be frank, that's a challenge that's out of our reach at the moment.
We are obliged to make a fundamental aside here to understand the limits of recycling, limits which we are also confronted with. They are based on the laws of thermodynamics discovered by Nicolas Léonard Sadi Carnot in 1824. They state that energy is constant in quantity and can therefore be neither created nor destroyed, but only transformed (law of conservation) or moved from one system to another in the universe. The same applies to matter. However, its quality is inexorably deteriorating (law of entropy) and its recycling potential is diminishing. So we need to keep up our efforts to recycle, but be aware that it's not a miracle solution either.
On the positive side, we've found that this project has been very inspiring, both for us and for our community. Our customers like to take part in the recycling process, it's even become a reflex. This shows that through a process of recycling education (for us, the brands, and for the consumer), a change in practice is entirely possible! It's encouraging in these times when ecological defeatism sometimes takes over!