From over a thousand applications across roughly 100 countries, L’Oréal has chosen 13 pioneering organisations to join its sustainable innovation initiative, L’Accelerator, backed by €5 million over five years. These “agents of change” reflect L’Oréal’s commitment to circularity, low-carbon solutions, and bio-based ingredients in cosmetics.
Among the selected companies, six focus on packaging and materials. Sweden’s PulPac and the UK’s Pulpex are advancing low-carbon paper packaging and recyclable paper bottles, while Sweden’s Blue Ocean Closures is replacing plastic components with fibre-based caps and lids. Estonia’s Raiku offers premium, shock-absorbing wood-based packaging, the UK’s Kelpi produces sustainable packaging from algae, and Japan’s Bioworks delivers high-performance bioplastics from sugar cane.
Natural and renewable cosmetic ingredients are also highlighted, with French company Biosynthis supplying biodegradable raw materials. US-based P2 Science brings green-chemistry and bio-based solutions, while Oberon Fuels produces ingredients from upcycled wood and pulp waste.
Circular economy innovators join the cohort as well. Belgian company Novobiom transforms waste into usable material via fungi, French company Replace recycles complex multi-layer waste, and Brazil’s Gás Verde offers biomethane as a sustainable alternative to fossil fuels. UK-based Neutreeno provides tools to calculate and reduce emissions across the production chain.
The programme is being deployed in partnership with the University of Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL), which will provide intensive support to the selected organisations, helping them scale solutions that could reshape the future of sustainable beauty.







