Woola, an Estonian Startup, Is Making a Substitute for Bubble Wrap From Wool Waste

Woola, an Estonian based company has invented reusable and eco-friendly packaging made out of local waste wool as a substitute for the bubble wrap that protects an estimated 63 billion packages every year.

Woola’s CEO Anna-Liisa Palatu, a former retail shipping professional, was appalled by the packaging practices of her industry. When she found out that 200,000 tons of wool was left over from European wool production each year, she put two-and-two together and co-founded Woola. Founding her company in Talinn alongside industry leading start-ups such as Skype, Bolt, Pipedrive, Wise, Veriff gave her the confidence to see that Woola could help end plastics. 

With manufacturing located in Estonia, Woola mainly focuses on Europe. They source all of their wool locally from Estonian farmers. As they expand globally in the future, their aim is to continue to work with local manufacturing units. We sat down with Palatu to talk about the baas and benefits of bubble-wool. 

Anna Mikaela Ekstrand: How are you aiming to change retail/art shipping and transport?

Liisa Palatu: Woola is an alternative to plastic packaging. Our goal is to make fossil fuels redundant. They are the single biggest cause of climate change. And plastic bubble wrap is made from fossil fuels. In fact, every year, 63 billion packages are shipped in bubble wrap. Our goal is to halve that number by 2030 by producing a functional alternative that is free from fossil fuels.

Although this is a very ambitious goal, we have no choice if we want to keep our planet livable. This does not necessarily mean that Woola will dominate the bubble wrap market by 2030. However, we need to create a movement that forces companies to start using sustainable alternatives to bubble wrap, be it Woola packaging or something else.

Why wool? 

I happened to read an article by the sheep wool expert and textile designer Katrin Kabun. In the article, Kabun explained how sheep wool is a truly wonderful material. It’s durable, elastic, protects against extreme temperatures, and naturally regenerative. At the same time about 200,000 tons of it is left over in Europe every year, and such waste wool is often buried or even burned.

I got in touch with Kabun and not much later, the three of us founded Woola to create postal packages from waste wool as a sustainable alternative to bubble wrap.

How do you advocate for Woola, for example, which organizations are you part of? 

We invest our time where we can see the biggest potential impact – most of our time goes into our own product development, communicating to stakeholders, and learning about sustainable supply chains. We gather our learnings on our product and brand and this is the main way we advocate for Woola. We are also part of Cleantech Associations Europe and involved in e-commerce unions, such as the Swedish e-commerce union Svensk Digital Handel. 

In a world that is globalized, how do we work towards more sustainability. Do we try to aim for more local sourcing or find ways to transport across boarders more sustainably? How do we find balance?

Inventing and implementing sustainable solutions is important both in local sourcing and transportation across borders. It is clear that more needs to be done in both directions, as the globalized world cannot live without either. 

Woola
Woola’s bottle sleeve. Photograph courtesy of Woola.

How did you engineer the materials you use? Who have you worked with to tailor the bubble-wool for transport of various products.

Woola’s product development has its roots in research. Woola’s cofounder Kabun’s background is at the Estonian Academy of Arts, where she is working on her Doctoral thesis on sheep wool as a valuable renewable resource in product design. 

While research forms the foundation of our product engineering, we owe our success to our work ethic. Our motto is “sometimes lose, always win,” which means try, fail and try again. Our experience has shown that drawings on paper differ greatly from the results in real life.

We have reached today’s product through repeated testing, learning and trying again.

When you approach new clients what surprises them the most?

Most people have no idea how much wool goes to waste globally. The shocking figures surprise our customers the most – it’s typically anywhere from 40-90% of all wool production in European countries. It’s a true revelation that we’re throwing away so much of the wonderful material that can be so much more.

How can galleries, collectors and others who ship art around the world do better?

Plastic bubble wrap is still the main protective material used for shipping art. There aren’t many great sustainable alternatives to bubble wrap yet, but there are some innovations coming out of the paper industry and then there are of course companies breaking new ground with materials like wool or mushroom packaging. 

Considering the value of art, I am baffled that most galleries and collectors haven’t adopted more innovative packaging materials yet. It shouldn’t be a question of cost given the value of the items–and the fact that even new innovations in protective packaging are still affordable. Perhaps anyone shipping art around the world should consider the packaging as a part of the whole experience of the art–just as ecommerce businesses win customers’ hearts and loyalty with impressive “un-boxing” experiences. And there’s hardly anything delightful about unboxing plastic bubble wrap.

How big are your operations currently?

We have a team of about 15 people spread across Europe – including our manufacturing unit in Paldiski, Estonia.

Bubble-wool detail. Photograph courtesy of Woola,

Has being Estonian impacted the way you approach sustainability?

We have certainly drawn a lot of inspiration from the ecosystem that surrounds us – mainly from the mindset. Growing up in Estonia, we witnessed the “start-up story” of a country that went from having nothing in the 1990s to becoming one of the most entrepreneurial and fifth least corrupt countries in the world (right after Norway, Finland, Sweden and Denmark in 2022).

Scandinavia has been a role model for Estonia throughout the last decades, showing the way in striving towards sustainability and fairness. But our belief in being able to change the world mainly came from Estonian entrepreneurs. We saw the success stories of Skype, Bolt, Pipedrive, Wise, Veriff – all companies founded in Tallinn. Seeing them make it gave us confidence that we can also solve huge problems, such as ending plastic.

A version of this article was also published in Cultbytes.

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Anna Mikaela Ekstrand is an art critic and cultural strategist. She is the founder of Cultbytes an online art publication and culture-focused communications agency. She is also the Associate Director of The Immigrant Artist Biennial and is curating its 2023 edition. Anna Mikaela has held curatorial positions at the Metropolitan Museum, Museum of Arts and Design, Solomon R. Guggenheim, and Bard Graduate Center. She holds dual Master’s Degrees in Art and Design History from Stockholm University and Bard Graduate Center.

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