South African company Kwality Holdings has partnered with global sustainable manufacturer Waste2Wear to introduce blockchain-verified recycled products to the South African market, marking one of the country’s first large-scale initiatives to combine circular manufacturing with blockchain-enabled product traceability.
The collaboration is aimed at providing businesses and consumers with independently verifiable information about the origin, manufacturing process, and environmental impact of recycled products. The companies said the initiative addresses growing demand for transparency as organizations increasingly seek credible sustainability solutions backed by measurable data rather than environmental claims alone.
The partnership will introduce blockchain-verified recycled products across South Africa, enabling customers to trace product origins and environmental impact through secure digital records and QR codes.
Waste2Wear specializes in manufacturing sustainable bags and textiles using post-consumer recycled plastics. Through blockchain-supported traceability, every product is linked to a unique QR code that provides customers with verified details covering raw material sources, processing stages, manufacturing history, and environmental performance throughout the supply chain.
Kwality Holdings stated that South Africa already has established recycling companies and manufacturers producing recycled products. However, the company believes the partnership introduces a different value proposition by combining internationally recognized certification, advanced traceability systems, independently verified environmental reporting, and patent-pending recycled-content verification technology within a single platform.
According to Kwality Holdings Chief Executive Officer Shahzaadee Ballim, the company viewed sustainability as requiring measurable proof rather than unverified claims. The executive explained that Waste2Wear distinguished itself through its ability to demonstrate environmental impact using transparent and independently verified systems. Ballim also noted that South Africa had not yet deployed circular manufacturing, blockchain-enabled traceability, and independently verified environmental reporting together at scale, adding that the partnership could help fill that gap while supporting future localization and expansion of the circular economy.
Waste2Wear Chief Executive Officer George Tsogas said the partnership represented an opportunity to expand the company’s operations into South Africa through a collaboration that aligned with its business strategy.
Beginning in mid-2026, the companies plan to supply blockchain-verified products across multiple categories, including reusable shopping bags, retail packaging, conference bags, backpacks, laptop bags, business accessories, and uniforms for the hospitality, healthcare, and industrial sectors.
The partnership originated after Kwality Holdings received a customer inquiry for sustainable shopping bags. During its evaluation of global suppliers, the company concluded that many products marketed as recycled or environmentally friendly lacked independent verification. Ballim explained that the search gradually shifted from identifying sustainable products to finding reliable proof of environmental claims, ultimately leading to the collaboration with Waste2Wear.
Waste2Wear’s platform combines circular manufacturing with blockchain-enabled traceability, independent verification, and environmental impact reporting to improve transparency across complex supply chains. Independent verification is supported by German testing institute Wessling, which validates the company’s patent-pending recycled-content verification technology. Environmental impact calculations are also independently verified using established methodologies.
Depending on product type and application, Waste2Wear reported that its manufacturing processes have demonstrated reductions of up to 88% in energy consumption, 71% in carbon emissions, and 46% in water usage compared with production using conventional virgin materials.
Ballim said the company decided to introduce Waste2Wear‘s solutions to South Africa because it believes businesses should pursue measurable environmental impact alongside commercial success. The executive added that the partnership reflected shared values centered on combining economic growth with environmental responsibility while contributing to long-term sustainability.
The initiative reflects a broader shift toward blockchain-backed sustainability reporting, giving businesses and consumers greater confidence in environmental claims through independently verified digital traceability. As demand for transparent supply chains continues to grow, the partnership is expected to support wider adoption of verifiable sustainability practices across South Africa’s consumer and industrial markets.
