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- Published: February 2026
- Pages: 134
- Tables: 38
- Figures: 8
Carbon fibers are high-performance materials consisting of filaments that are ninety-two percent or greater carbon, with individual diameters measuring just a few microns across. Grouped into tows ranging from small bundles to large industrial-scale configurations, carbon fibers deliver an exceptional combination of properties — high tensile strength, high modulus, very low density compared to metals like steel, excellent fatigue resistance, corrosion resistance, a low coefficient of thermal expansion, and inherent electrical and thermal conductivity. These characteristics have established carbon fiber as one of the most strategically important advanced materials of the twenty-first century.
Carbon fibers are classified along several dimensions: by modulus (ranging from low to ultra-high), by precursor material, and by heat treatment temperature. Standard modulus carbon fiber accounts for the vast majority of today's market. PAN (polyacrylonitrile)-based precursors dominate production owing to their ability to yield fibers with superior tensile strength. Pitch-based fibers, which represent a smaller share, offer the highest modulus and thermal conductivity, making them preferred for thermal management and ultra-stiff structural applications. Emerging bio-based precursors, including lignin and polyethylene, are under development with the aim of reducing both costs and environmental impact, though they remain at an early stage of commercial readiness.
Carbon fiber reinforced polymers (CFRPs) are the primary commercial form in which carbon fibers reach end users, combining fiber reinforcement with thermoset or thermoplastic polymer matrices. CFRPs are prized for their superior strength-to-weight ratio, which far exceeds that of steel, titanium, and aluminium on a specific stiffness basis.
Aerospace remains the largest single market for carbon fiber composites, with demand driven predominantly by commercial aircraft manufacturers. Next-generation wide-body aircraft incorporate composite laminates in a majority of their structural weight, and growing demand is also emerging from eVTOL air taxis, large drones, rockets, and satellites. Wind energy is a rapidly expanding market as turbine blade lengths increase and manufacturers shift from glass fiber to carbon fiber composites to reduce weight and improve rigidity. The automotive sector is accelerating its adoption of carbon fiber, driven by electric vehicle lightweighting requirements, emissions regulations, and growing use in battery enclosures, hydrogen fuel cell tanks, crash structures, and body components. Pressure vessels — particularly compressed hydrogen storage tanks — represent one of the fastest-growing application segments, propelled by the expanding hydrogen economy. Additional markets span construction and civil engineering, sports and leisure, marine, electronics, oil and gas, industrial equipment, and medical devices.
The competitive landscape is concentrated among a small number of major producers, led by Toray Industries of Japan. Other significant players include Hyosung Advanced Materials, Hexcel, Mitsubishi Chemical, Teijin, SGL Group, and several rapidly expanding Chinese manufacturers. This geographic diversification is reshaping the supply landscape, with Asia Pacific having overtaken North America and Europe as the largest consuming region.
Sustainability is becoming a central theme in the market. The recycled carbon fiber segment is growing rapidly, driven by end-of-life regulations, sustainability mandates, and the mounting volume of composite waste from aerospace, wind, and automotive sectors. Recycling technologies — including pyrolysis, solvolysis, and emerging plasma-based processes — are maturing, with several innovative companies scaling commercial operations.
Looking ahead, the market outlook is strong across all major segments. Near-term growth will be driven by aircraft production ramp-ups, offshore wind buildout, electric vehicle lightweighting, and hydrogen infrastructure. Medium-term growth will be augmented by urban air mobility platforms, advanced electronics, and medical applications. Key challenges include the relatively high cost of carbon fiber versus competing materials, supply chain concentration, long aerospace certification cycles, and the need for faster manufacturing processes to serve high-volume automotive demand. The convergence of decarbonisation mandates, lightweighting imperatives, renewable energy expansion, and the hydrogen economy positions carbon fiber as a strategically essential material for the global green transition.
The Global Carbon Fiber Market 2026-2036 is a comprehensive market research report providing in-depth analysis of the carbon fiber industry, covering technology trends, end-use applications, demand forecasts, competitive dynamics, and company profiles across the entire carbon fiber value chain. This report is an essential resource for carbon fiber manufacturers, composite producers, recyclers, investors, procurement professionals, and strategic planners seeking actionable intelligence on one of the most critical advanced materials markets of the coming decade.
Carbon fibers — lightweight, high-strength filaments composed of over 92% carbon — are enabling transformative change across aerospace, automotive, wind energy, hydrogen storage, and a growing number of emerging sectors. As global industries accelerate their pursuit of decarbonisation, lightweighting, and energy efficiency, carbon fiber has become a strategically indispensable material. This report examines the full spectrum of the carbon fiber market, from precursor chemistry and manufacturing processes through to downstream applications, pricing, supply chain structure, and regional demand patterns.
The report opens with a detailed technology introduction covering the fundamental properties and classifications of carbon fibers, including modulus types, tow sizes, and heat treatment grades. It provides thorough coverage of all major precursor materials — PAN (polyacrylonitrile), pitch, rayon, and emerging bio-based alternatives such as lignin and polyethylene — along with detailed descriptions of manufacturing steps including spinning, stabilization, carbonization, surface treatment, and sizing. A dedicated section addresses sustainability, ESG considerations, lifecycle assessment, and the carbon footprint of carbon fiber production, reflecting the growing importance of environmental performance in procurement and investment decisions.
A major focus of the report is the rapidly growing recycled carbon fiber (rCF) segment, with analysis of recycling technologies including pyrolysis, solvolysis, mechanical recycling, and plasma oxidation, alongside market size forecasts through 2036. The report also covers advanced manufacturing technologies such as automated fiber placement, out-of-autoclave processing, continuous fiber reinforced thermoplastics, nanostitching, and the innovation pipeline through 2030, including low-cost precursors, microwave-assisted carbonisation, AI-driven manufacturing, and carbon fiber derived from CO2.
End-use market analysis spans all key application sectors: aerospace, wind energy, sports and leisure, automotive, pressure vessels and the hydrogen economy, oil and gas, civil engineering and infrastructure, urban air mobility and eVTOL aircraft, space and satellite launch, marine, medical devices, and electronics. Each sector includes market drivers, application mapping, desirable carbon fiber properties, pricing benchmarks, and key industry players. The report provides detailed market analysis covering growth drivers and trends, regulatory impacts, US tariff and trade policy developments, pricing and cost structures, supply chain analysis, competitive landscape assessment, production capacity by manufacturer, and a forward-looking risk and opportunity framework.
Global carbon fiber demand is forecast by industry and by region from 2020 through 2036, with granular breakdowns for China, India, South Korea, Europe, North America, and Japan. Revenue forecasts by industry in billions of USD are also provided through 2036.
Report Contents include:
- Executive summary with market overview, competitive landscape, recycling trends, and future outlook
- Technology introduction covering carbon fiber properties, modulus classifications, and tow types
- Detailed analysis of precursor materials: PAN, pitch, rayon, lignin, polyethylene, textile PAN, and vapour grown carbon fiber
- Sustainability, ESG, lifecycle assessment, and decarbonisation pathways
- Recycled carbon fiber market analysis with technology comparison and market forecasts (2025–2036)
- Carbon fiber 3D printing technologies and continuous fiber printing producers
- Carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) applications and manufacturing process comparison
- Advanced manufacturing technologies: automated fiber placement, out-of-autoclave, thermoplastic composites, and nanostitching
- Technology innovation pipeline (2025–2030): low-cost precursors, microwave carbonisation, AI and digital twins, direct-write electronics, carbon fiber from CO2
- End-use market analysis for aerospace, wind energy, sports and leisure, automotive, pressure vessels, oil and gas, civil engineering, urban air mobility/eVTOL, space, marine, medical devices, and electronics
- Hydrogen economy analysis: vehicular storage, stationary storage, and cryogenic storage
- Market growth drivers, regulatory landscape, and US tariff and trade policy impacts (2024–2026)
- Price and cost analysis across carbon fiber grades and applications
- Supply chain mapping and competitive landscape assessment
- Production capacity by manufacturer (current and planned)
- Addressable market size by sector and future outlook by end-use market
- Market risks and opportunities assessment
- Global carbon fiber demand forecasts 2020–2036 by industry and by region (thousand metric tonnes)
- Global carbon fiber revenue forecasts 2020–2036 by industry (billions USD)
- Regional demand analysis: China, India, South Korea, Europe, North America, and Japan
- Over 110 company profiles across the carbon fiber value chain
1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2
- 1.1 Markets and applications 2
- 1.2 Market size and forecasts 3
- 1.3 Competitive landscape and production capacity 3
- 1.4 Recycling and circular economy 4
- 1.5 Future outlook 4
2 TECHNOLOGY INTRODUCTION 5
- 2.1 Properties of carbon fibers 5
- 2.1.1 Types by modulus 6
- 2.1.2 Types by the secondary processing 7
- 2.2 Precursor material types 8
- 2.2.1 PAN: Polyacrylonitrile 8
- 2.2.1.1 Spinning 9
- 2.2.1.2 Stabilizing 9
- 2.2.1.3 Carbonizing 10
- 2.2.1.4 Surface treatment 10
- 2.2.1.5 Sizing 10
- 2.2.1.6 Pitch-based carbon fibers 10
- 2.2.1.7 Isotropic pitch 10
- 2.2.1.8 Mesophase pitch 11
- 2.2.1.9 Viscose (Rayon)-based carbon fibers 12
- 2.2.2 Bio-based and alternative precursors 12
- 2.2.2.1 Lignin 12
- 2.2.2.2 Polyethylene 15
- 2.2.2.3 Vapor grown carbon fiber (VGCF) 16
- 2.2.2.4 Textile PAN 16
- 2.2.1 PAN: Polyacrylonitrile 8
- 2.3 Sustainability, ESG, and Lifecycle Assessment of Carbon Fibers 16
- 2.3.1 Carbon Footprint of Carbon Fiber Production 16
- 2.3.2 Decarbonisation Pathways 17
- 2.3.3 Lifecycle Assessment (LCA) Considerations 17
- 2.3.4 Regulatory Drivers for Sustainability 17
- 2.4 Recycled carbon fibers (r-CF) 18
- 2.4.1 The market for rCF 18
- 2.4.2 Recycling processes 18
- 2.4.2.1 Pyrolysis/Thermal Processing 18
- 2.4.2.2 Solvolysis/Chemical Recycling 19
- 2.4.2.3 Mechanical Recycling 19
- 2.4.2.4 Plasma Oxidation Technology 19
- 2.4.2.5 Recycled Carbon Fiber Market Size and Forecast (2025–2036) 21
- 2.4.3 Companies 21
- 2.5 Carbon Fiber 3D Printing 22
- 2.6 Plasma oxidation 25
- 2.7 Carbon fiber reinforced polymer (CFRP) 25
- 2.7.1 Applications 25
- 2.8 Advanced Manufacturing Technologies for Carbon Fiber Composites 27
- 2.8.1 Automated Fiber Placement (AFP) and Automated Tape Laying (ATL) 27
- 2.8.2 Out-of-Autoclave (OoA) Processing 27
- 2.8.3 Continuous Fiber Reinforced Thermoplastic Composites 27
- 2.8.4 Nanostitching and Advanced Interlaminar Technologies 27
- 2.8.5 Technology Innovation Pipeline (2025–2030) 28
- 2.8.5.1 Low-cost carbon fiber precursors 28
- 2.8.5.2 Microwave-assisted carbonisation 28
- 2.8.5.3 AI and digital twin manufacturing 28
- 2.8.5.4 Direct-write carbon fiber electronics 28
- 2.8.5.5 Carbon fiber from CO2 28
3 END USE MARKETS AND APPLICATIONS 29
- 3.1 Aerospace 29
- 3.1.1 Overview 29
- 3.1.2 2025/2026 Market Update 30
- 3.2 Wind energy 30
- 3.2.1 Overview 30
- 3.2.2 2025/2026 Market Update 30
- 3.3 Sports & leisure 32
- 3.3.1 Overview 32
- 3.4 Automotive 32
- 3.4.1 Overview 32
- 3.4.2 2025/2026 Market Update 34
- 3.5 Pressure vessels 35
- 3.5.1 Hydrogen Economy 36
- 3.5.1.1 Vehicular Hydrogen Storage 36
- 3.5.1.2 Stationary and Transport Hydrogen Storage 36
- 3.5.1.3 Cryogenic Hydrogen Storage — An Emerging Disruption 36
- 3.5.1 Hydrogen Economy 36
- 3.6 Oil and gas 37
- 3.7 Civil Engineering and Infrastructure 38
- 3.8 Emerging and High-Growth Application Markets 38
- 3.8.1 Urban Air Mobility (UAM) and eVTOL Aircraft 38
- 3.8.2 Space and Satellite Launch 39
- 3.8.3 Marine and Shipbuilding 39
- 3.8.4 Medical Devices and Prosthetics 39
- 3.8.5 Electrical and Electronics 39
- 3.9 Market analysis 40
- 3.9.1 Market Growth Drivers and Trends 40
- 3.9.2 Regulations 40
- 3.9.3 US Tariff and Trade Policy Impacts (2025–2026) 41
- 3.9.4 Price and Costs Analysis 42
- 3.9.5 Supply Chain 42
- 3.9.6 Competitive Landscape 42
- 3.9.6.1 Annual capacity, by producer 44
- 3.9.7 Future Outlook 45
- 3.9.8 Addressable Market Size 47
- 3.9.9 Risks and Opportunities 47
4 GLOBAL CARBON FIBER DEMAND 2020-2036 49
- 4.1 By Industry (Thousand Metric Tonnes) 49
- 4.2 By Region (Thousand Metric Tonnes) 49
- 4.2.1 China 50
- 4.2.2 India 50
- 4.2.3 South Korea 51
- 4.2.4 Europe 51
- 4.2.5 North America 51
- 4.2.6 Japan 51
- 4.3 Revenues by Industry (Billions USD) 52
5 COMPANY PROFILES 53
- 5.1 Carbon fiber producers 53 (29 company profiles)
- 5.2 Carbon Fiber composite producers 71 (65 company profiles)
- 5.3 Carbon fiber recyclers 107 (17 company profiles)
6 REFERENCES 120
List of Tables
- Table 1. Classification and types of the carbon fibers. 5
- Table 2. Summary of carbon fiber properties. 6
- Table 3. Modulus classifications of carbon fiber. 6
- Table 4. Comparison of main precursor fibers. 8
- Table 5. Properties of lignins and their applications. 14
- Table 6. Lignin-derived anodes in lithium batteries. 15
- Table 7. Fiber properties of polyolefin-based CFs. 16
- Table 8. Lifecycle carbon footprint comparison (per kg of material) 17
- Table 9. Summary of carbon fiber (CF) recycling technologies. Advantages and disadvantages. 19
- Table 10. Retention rate of tensile properties of recovered carbon fibres by different recycling processes. 21
- Table 11. Recycled carbon fiber producers, technology and capacity. 22
- Table 12. Methods for direct fiber integration. 22
- Table 13. Continuous fiber 3D printing producers. 23
- Table 14. Summary of markets and applications for CFRPs. 25
- Table 15. Comparison of CFRP manufacturing processes 27
- Table 16. Comparison of CFRP to competing materials. 29
- Table 17. The market for carbon fibers in wind energy-market drivers, applications, desirable properties, pricing and key players. 31
- Table 18. The market for carbon fibers in sports & leisure-market drivers, applications, desirable properties, pricing and key players. 32
- Table 19. The market for carbon fibers in automotive-market drivers, applications, desirable properties, pricing and key players. 33
- Table 20. Carbon fiber automotive applications by component and adoption stage 34
- Table 21. The market for carbon fibers in pressure vessels-market drivers, desirable properties of CF, applications, pricing, key players. 35
- Table 22. Key Type IV Pressure Vessel Manufacturers 36
- Table 23. Hydrogen economy carbon fiber demand forecast 37
- Table 24. The market for carbon fibers in oil and gas-market drivers, desirable properties, applications, pricing and key players. 37
- Table 25. Carbon fiber demand from UAM/eVTOL sector — key parameters 38
- Table 26. Market drivers and trends in carbon fibers. 40
- Table 27. Regulations pertaining to carbon fibers 40
- Table 28. Key US trade policy actions affecting carbon fiber (2024–2026) 41
- Table 29. Price and costs analysis for carbon fibers. 42
- Table 30. Carbon fibers supply chain. 42
- Table 31. Production capacities of carbon fiber producers, in metric tonnes, current and planned. 44
- Table 32. Future Outlook by End-Use Market. 45
- Table 33. Addressable market size for carbon fibers by market. 47
- Table 34. Market challenges in the CF and CFRP market. 48
- Table 35. Global carbon fiber demand 2016-2035, by industry (MT). 49
- Table 36. Global Carbon Fiber Demand 2020–2036, by Region (Thousand Metric Tonnes) 50
- Table 37. Global Carbon Fiber Revenues 2020–2036, by Industry (Billions USD) 52
- Table 38. Toray production sites 68
List of Figures
- Figure 1. Manufacturing process of PAN type carbon fibers. 9
- Figure 2. Production processes for pitch-based carbon fibers. 11
- Figure 3. Lignin/celluose precursor. 12
- Figure 4. Process of preparing CF from lignin. 13
- Figure 5. Neustark modular plant. 61
- Figure 6. CR-9 carbon fiber wheel. 80
- Figure 7. The Continuous Kinetic Mixing system. 85
- Figure 8. Chemical decomposition process of polyurethane foam. 116
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- Mid-year Update
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