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L’Oréal Partners With Dioxycle To Turn Captured Carbon Into Sustainable Packaging Materials

L’Oréal Partners With Dioxycle To Turn Captured Carbon Into Sustainable Packaging Materials

L’Oréal Partners With Dioxycle To Turn Captured Carbon Into Sustainable Packaging Materials

  • L’Oréal signs a multi-year partnership with Dioxycle to convert captured CO₂ emissions into ethylene for polyethylene packaging.
  • Carbon electrolysis technology could reduce Scope 3 emissions tied to petrochemical based plastics in global beauty supply chains.
  • The collaboration introduces a scalable alternative to fossil derived packaging materials while maintaining virgin quality performance.

L’Oréal Groupe has entered a multi-year partnership with clean chemicals startup Dioxycle to transform captured carbon emissions into sustainable packaging materials, marking a significant step toward decarbonizing plastics used across global consumer supply chains.

The collaboration will see Dioxycle deploy its carbon electrolysis technology to convert captured carbon monoxide and carbon dioxide emissions into sustainable ethylene. Ethylene is the primary building block of polyethylene, one of the most widely used plastics in global packaging and traditionally produced from fossil fuels.

For the beauty sector, where packaging represents a substantial share of product related emissions, the partnership offers a pathway to reduce dependence on petrochemical feedstocks while preserving the performance characteristics required for large scale consumer products.

By integrating polyethylene produced through carbon electrolysis into its packaging portfolio, L’Oréal aims to address a major contributor to its Scope 3 emissions. For many multinational companies, emissions associated with purchased goods and materials represent the largest share of their overall carbon footprint.

Carbon Electrolysis As A New Feedstock Source

Dioxycle’s approach converts captured industrial carbon emissions into usable chemical building blocks through an electrochemical process powered by electricity. The resulting ethylene can then be used to manufacture polyethylene that performs identically to conventional plastic.

This “drop-in” capability is critical for industries that rely on highly standardized materials and supply chains. Unlike some alternative packaging solutions, carbon-derived polyethylene can integrate directly into existing manufacturing systems without requiring redesigns or new processing infrastructure.

The technology is designed to complement, rather than replace, other decarbonization pathways such as recycling and bio-based materials. By turning captured emissions into a renewable carbon source, it adds a new feedstock stream that could help diversify the raw materials used in plastics production.

For corporate sustainability teams, the appeal lies in the combination of emissions reduction and operational compatibility. Virgin-quality materials that lower carbon intensity allow companies to pursue climate targets without compromising product quality or manufacturing efficiency.

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Corporate Climate Strategy Meets Materials Innovation

The partnership reflects increasing pressure on multinational brands to address emissions embedded deep within their value chains.

Packaging materials represent a major environmental impact category for the beauty and personal care industry. Plastics derived from fossil fuels remain dominant because they provide durability, clarity, and cost efficiency at scale.

Replacing those materials with alternatives that match performance standards has been one of the sector’s most difficult sustainability challenges.

Dr. Sarah Lamaison, CEO and Co-Founder of Dioxycle, said the partnership demonstrates how climate technologies can move from laboratory innovation to industrial adoption. “By partnering with a global beauty group that demands the highest standards of excellence, we’re proving that sustainability and performance can go hand in hand,” said Dr. Sarah Lamaison, CEO and Co-Founder of Dioxycle. “L’ORÉAL’s leadership in adopting scalable climate solutions sets a powerful precedent and brings us closer to a circular carbon-based chemical industry.”

Dr. Sarah Lamaison, CEO and Co-Founder of Dioxycle

For L’Oréal, the move forms part of a broader push to incorporate next-generation materials and technologies into its packaging strategy.

As a world leader in beauty, L’Oréal operationalizes future-forward technologies. The conversion of carbon emissions into innovative materials unlocks unprecedented avenues for increasingly desirable, high-performing, and sustainable packaging, paving the way for a new era of environmental footprint reduction for our industry and beyond.” Jacques Playe, SVP Global Development Packaging, L’Oréal Groupe.

Jacques Playe, SVP Global Development Packaging, L’Oréal Groupe

Implications For Global Supply Chains

The agreement highlights a broader shift underway in the chemicals and consumer goods industries, where carbon capture technologies are increasingly being linked to materials production rather than treated solely as an emissions mitigation tool.

If scaled successfully, carbon electrolysis could create a new circular supply chain where captured emissions become raw materials for plastics, chemicals, and other industrial products.

For investors and executives, the partnership illustrates the growing convergence of climate technology, advanced materials, and corporate decarbonization strategies.

Major brands are now looking beyond recycling and bio-based plastics toward technologies that can reshape the underlying carbon inputs of global manufacturing.

For the beauty sector, where packaging innovation often influences broader consumer trends, the implications could extend far beyond cosmetics. Turning waste carbon into high-performance materials may become an important pillar of future circular economy strategies across industries seeking to meet climate targets while maintaining product quality and scale.

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