In this episode of the Selected Podcast, Ben Costantini speaks with Sam Staincliffe, co-founder of Uplift360, a cleantech startup pioneering chemical recycling solutions for high-performance materials. With a background spanning the UK Ministry of Defence, the UN, and the American Red Cross, Sam’s journey into entrepreneurship is anything but conventional. Live from JEC World 2025, Sam shares the mission behind Uplift360, the challenges of building a deep tech startup with roots in defense and sustainability, and why marketing is the unexpected key to growth—even for companies made almost entirely of scientists.
Sam’s professional path began in defense and humanitarian operations, where she witnessed firsthand the enormous waste created by high-tech, mission-critical gear—aircraft components, body armor, and more. Frustrated by the environmental impact and economic loss of disposal, she teamed up with Jamie Meighan, a former RAF officer, to co-found Uplift360: a company that chemically recycles advanced materials like Kevlar and carbon fiber composites, turning waste into high-value resources.
Founded in 2021 in the UK and now headquartered in Luxembourg, Uplift360 has grown to 16 team members—mostly scientists focused on R&D in materials, chemistry, and engineering. Their Series A launch was announced live on stage at JEC. Until recently, the company operated with no dedicated marketing team, a common thread in the composites industry. That changed with the arrival of an intern named Trisha, who helped reshape their brand presence, website, and press strategy—proving marketing matters, even in deep tech.
At JEC, Sam unveiled a major milestone: Uplift360 successfully dissolved and respun para-aramid fibers (known commercially as Kevlar and Twaron) using a proprietary chemical process. These materials, once considered unrecyclable, can now be transformed into new high-performance fibers. With a price tag of nearly €100/kg, this isn’t just a sustainability win—it’s an economic one.
“Kevlar is 80 times more expensive than steel—and we’re turning it from a waste burden into a circular asset.”
While Uplift360’s first use case is defense, the applications are expanding into aerospace, mass transit, and even outdoor gear—industries previously wary of para-aramid’s carbon footprint. Uplift’s regenerated fibers offer up to 75% less CO₂ impact compared to virgin materials, making circularity a business case, not just a moral one.
Sam emphasizes that sustainability alone isn’t enough to drive industrial change. What works is circular innovation that aligns with business incentives. Uplift360’s pitch: transform waste into supply chain independence and margin growth. In a world increasingly focused on strategic autonomy, especially in Europe, that message is resonating—especially with defense and aerospace leaders.
Uplift360’s growth is partly enabled by Europe’s progressive stance on waste regulation, green R&D funding, and climate goals. Being based in Luxembourg gives them access to EU-level policy and markets, and Sam sees the region as both a testing ground and a launchpad for global expansion.
“Europe may not be sitting on mountains of fossil fuels—but we’re sitting on mountains of waste. That’s our strategic resource.”
Uplift360 – Pioneering material regeneration
JEC World – The leading international composites show