Definition
Perfume upcycling describes a sourcing approach in niche perfumery that turns by-products or waste streams from other industries into fragrance raw materials. The most cited inputs are patchouli distillation fractions, vetiver leftover biomass, citrus peels, wine pomace and buds, coffee husks and wood chippings (source: Givaudan). The central criterion is the origin of the material, not the process used to extract it.
Origin and history
The practice sits within the broader circular economy movement formalized in the 2010s. The flagship perfumery case remains Akigalawood, a captive launched by Givaudan in the mid-2010s and obtained by enzymatic oxidation from patchouli oil fractions that previously went unused (source: Givaudan).
The approach widened in the early 2020s under combined pressure from European regulation and ESG commitments. Symrise formalized an Upcycled Vetiver program drawing on leftover biomass from Haiti, the world's largest vetiver producer (source: Ethos).
Use in perfumery
Three families of by-products dominate the palette. Plant residues from aromatic crops cover patchouli fractions, vetiver biomass and cassis buds recovered from the wine industry. Citrus peels and pulps come from the juice sector, which generates more than 40 million tons of waste a year. Wood, pomace and husks recycle sawmill chips and coffee by-products (source: Worldcrunch).
On the brand side, Etat Libre d'Orange released I Am Trash in 2018, an explicit upcycling manifesto, and L'Artisan Parfumeur has explored the approach across several recent launches.
Sources
- Givaudan, From leftovers to luxury: pioneering upcycling in fragrances (accessed 4 June 2026)
- Ethos, Inside the Fragrance Industry's Obsession with Upcycled Vetiver (accessed 4 June 2026)
- Worldcrunch, The Perfume Industry's Upcycling Savoir Faire (accessed 4 June 2026)
- Symrise, Circular economy (accessed 4 June 2026)