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Sustainability Inside the Operations

OEMs outline initiatives underway to become environmentally-friendly businesses.

Viking Masek Packaging Technologies’ solar-paneled facility creates the energy needed to power its own facility, as well as 28 homes in the surrounding area.
Viking Masek Packaging Technologies’ solar-paneled facility creates the energy needed to power its own facility, as well as 28 homes in the surrounding area.
Viking Masek

OEMs today are not shying away from their commitment to sustainability. More than just a buzz word, sustainability today encompasses how a company approaches everything from new product launches to equipment manufacturing, powering their facilities, and even employee recycling.

“To minimize our climate impact and ensure food security for the future, we take a full lifecycle view. We need to drive down carbon emissions at every step of the value chain, and there are a few impactful ways of doing so,” says Lisa Rydén, vice president of corporate social responsibility at Tetra Pak, a food processing and packaging solutions company.

The company does so by working to “decarbonize materials,” by using responsibly sourced, renewable plant-based materials instead of the virgin, fossil-based materials commonly used today. Tetra Pak also works to “decarbonize production” by working with suppliers to minimize carbon footprint upstream, utilizing renewable energy, and reducing the carbon impact of the company’s equipment. And lastly, the company focuses on reducing food loss and waste and on recycling initiatives.  

Many companies and OEMs, including Wexxar Bel, the case forming an case erecting equipment manufacturer, use a multi-pronged approach to sustainability, focusing not only on equipment but also materials. Part of the Pro Mach company, Wexxar Bel’s sustainability plan focuses on equipment efficiency and sustainability, as well as initiatives that impact the company’s everyday operations. For instance, the OEM says it recycles all wood, soft plastic, and corrugated scraps, and aims to use fewer caustic (corrosive) chemicals in their facilities.

On the equipment side of things, as Wexxar Bel works to design new equipment, the company says it aims to do this by reducing or simplifying certain parts of the machine to help lower its carbon footprint, lower energy consumption, and reduce the number of parts needed to be manufactured.

Going above and beyond equipment improvements and recycling, some OEMs are making drastic changes to their facilities to better achieve their sustainability goals. Environmentally invested since 1959, Polypack, a secondary packaging OEM focusing on shrink and corrugate bundling, focuses on sustainability in four areas: source reduction, research and development, energy efficiency, and using eco-friendly materials. But taking it perhaps one step further is Polypack’s solar-powered facility.

Leveraging solar energy

Polypack’s 82,000+ sq.-ft. Pinellas Park, Florida facility features 1,629 solar panels that power a vast majority of its operations. According to Nicolas Cerf, sales director of Polypack, Inc. the plant gets 95% of its energy from solar power. “Polypack’s building is lucky to have one of the largest private solar farms in the state of Florida. This acts as a daily reminder of the importance of sustainability for all of our employees. The performance of the panels is displayed on a monitor in the lobby for everyone to take a look at,” says Cerf. Polypack’s Florida facility features 1,629 solar panels that power a vast majority of its operations.Polypack’s Florida facility features 1,629 solar panels that power a vast majority of its operations.Polypack

Even in northern climates, solar energy can be leveraged to help companies reduce their carbon footprint and be independently energy efficient. Viking Masek Packaging Technologies’ 33,000 sq. ft.-facility in Oostburg, Wisconsin utilizes solar panels that generate 300,000 kWh annually, providing the company with $25,000 in annual utility costs savings. But aside from saving money, Ty Weinhold, COO of Viking Masek Packaging Technologies, says the solar panels create the energy needed to power its facility and help power the surrounding community. “By utilizing an environmentally conscious energy source we can provide a great deal of value to the community, producing enough excess electricity to power 28 homes in the surrounding area. In addition to reducing our carbon footprint, we can invest in other areas of business while increasing our bottom line. Our investment has paid for itself in full in just three years,” Weinhold says.


Read article   Read how OEMs are making energy-efficient equipment.