DataBeyond CEO Mo Zhuoya stands near piles of used clothing prepared for sorting using the Fastsort-Textile AI sorting machine in Zhangjiagang, China, on March 20.
11:07 JST, April 8, 2026
ZHANGJIAGANG, China (AP) — In an industrial park in Zhangjiagang, a small city on China’s east coast, a large humming and hissing machine feeds on piles of used clothes and sorts them.
The novelty? It uses artificial intelligence to sort them by composition at high speed, offering a glimpse into how AI could play a role in reducing the impact of synthetic textile waste.
The Fastsort-Textile machine, named one of Time magazine’s Best Inventions of 2025, was created by DataBeyond, a Chinese AI recycling company founded in 2018.
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Synthetic textiles are derived from fossil fuels and are a low-cost, popular option for fashion production. Altogether they account for around 70% of global textile production, according to a report from Amsterdam-based nonprofit Circle Economy, which analyzes ways to reduce textile waste.
Textile waste is a major global pollutant, with China as the leading contributor. China led global textile exports at $142 billion, more than double that of the European Union, according to the World Trade Organization’s 2025 Key Insights and Trends report.
Fastsort-Textile is being used only in one location in China: Shanhesheng Environmental Technology Ltd., a textile recycling facility in Zhangjiagang that installed the machine in 2025.
DataBeyond’s Fastsort-Textile AI sorting machine processes synthetic textile at high speed.
The equipment uses an AI scanner to read the composition of such textiles and sorts them by fibers, after which they can be recycled.
Fastsort-Textile sorts through 100 kilograms of clothes in two to three minutes, compared to around four hours for one worker to do the same thing. The machine can process two tons per hour, while two people would need two days and at reduced accuracy, according to analysis by Shanhesheng.
The AI scanner measuring 5 meters by 2 meters works with a series of conveyer belts. Workers load stacks of textiles onto belts that move them through the scanner, which emits a sharp hiss while reading the textiles’ composition. A live video feed displays the reading on the scanner’s side.
It takes less than one second to accurately read one item’s material composition, which is set according to customers’ desired benchmarks.
After the scanning process, the textiles are transported to nylon and polyester sorting areas for recycling. Items below the benchmark are sorted into a different area mainly for incineration or landfill, which is where textile pollution wreaks its most damage.
“This sort of thing saves money on labor costs, it saves time. When people sort materials, they can’t tell accurately if it’s 80% or 90% polyester. This machine rarely makes mistakes,” Shanhesheng Sales Manager Cui Peng said.
Previously, up to 50% of the processed textiles were deemed unrecyclable and sent to landfills or incinerated. That number is down to 30% with the Fastsort-Textile machine, Sales Director Li Bin said.
“Now, though machines are already capable of sorting, people’s energy is limited,” he said. “People can’t work for 24 hours straight, so robots may take over the roles in the end. The ultimate goal is a ‘dark factory’ with the robots running 24 hours.”
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