Tencel® Celebrates 20th Anniversary

LENZING, Austria/MOBILE, Ala. — December 11, 2012 — TENCEL® has turned 20. The first large
production facility for lyocell fibers was put into operation in Mobile/Alabama (USA) in 1992.
Today the Lenzing Group manufactures Tencel fibers at three sites located in Austria, Great Britain
and the USA. Lenzing celebrated this anniversary by holding a commemorative ceremony and a customer
symposium.

20 years ago the Tencel plant in Mobile was the first large-scale industrial production site
in the world for the new lyocell fibers. The factory was originally built by the British company
Courtaulds plc., a former Lenzing competitor. Lenzing also took over this facility within the
context of the acquisition of the Tencel Group in the year 2004. In recent years it has been
technologically upgraded, and annual production capacity was increased to the current level of
about 50,000 tons of Tencel fibers. Today Lenzing manufactures Tencel fibers at three sites:
Heiligenkreuz (Austria) with an annual capacity of 60,000 tons, Grimsby (Great Britain), featuring
a capacity of approx. 40,000 tons each year, and the Mobile, Alabama plant. A fourth production
plant is currently being constructed in Lenzing (Upper Austria). Total annual capacity will amount
to 60,000 tons, and the facility will be the first second-generation Tencel plant from a
technological perspective.

On the occasion of the special commemorative ceremony, Lenzing CEO Peter Untersperger
emphasized the tremendous importance of the Tencel technology. “Tencel has been the biggest
technological step forward in the man-made cellulose fiber industry since the invention of viscose
fibers about 100 years ago. The development of the fiber over the last 20 years only marks the
beginning of a success story which will continue for many decades to come. Tencel ideally combines
the need for competitive production costs compared to other fibers with the requirement of ensuring
sustainable, environmentally compatible production. Tencel is a breakthrough technology, and I am
proud that the Lenzing Group is by far the world’s number one provider of Tencel fibers.”

The beginnings: a competitive race between giants

The initial phase in the development of lyocell fibers (marketed by Lenzing today
exclusively under the brand name Tencel) was characterized by a bitter rivalry between the Lenzing
Group and Courtaulds. Both companies conducted research in competition with each other to become
the first of the two firms to launch promising new fibers on the marketplace. At the production
start in Mobile in 1992, Courtaulds had a competitive edge, but Lenzing’s first large-scale lyocell
factory in Heiligenkreuz (Burgenland) was already in the pipeline. It was successfully put into
operation in 1996. In 2004, Lenzing finally acquired the Tencel Group and all its production sites.

Combining forces

The merger of Tencel and Lenzing led to a bundling of their collective strengths. The
two-way know-how exchange and the decision to consolidate research and development on Tencel fibers
at one site finally led to the sought-after breakthrough on the marketplace for the new generation
of fibers. The range of applications was expanded, and the Tencel business subsequently developed
very dynamically, spreading from the USA to Europe and Asia.

Diverse applications

At the present time Tencel fibers are used by the textile industry as well as for nonwovens.
The production process is particularly environmentally compatible, and is characterized by the
nearly complete recovery of the deployed solvent.

Lenzing is continuously developing new applications in cooperation with customers and
partners. The optimal moisture management of Tencel fibers makes them attractive for use in home
textiles such as mattresses, quilts and bed linen as well sportswear and women’s outerwear. Tencel
is also integrated into sensitive segments such as cosmetics, hygiene, and medicine, for example in
wound dressings and baby wipes. In the technical segment, Tencel is used, for example, to
strengthen plastics or to manufacture electrotechnical components.

Posted December 19, 2012

Source: Lenzing

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