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Sustainable Manufacturing

Sustainable Manufacturing Manufacturing Systems Analysis Professor: Nour El Kadri e-mail: nelkadri @ site.uottawa.ca. Sustainable Manufacturing. Origins of Sustainable Manufacturing: Sustainability Sustainable Manufacturing Concepts & Examples Principles of Sustainability        

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Sustainable Manufacturing

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  1. Sustainable ManufacturingManufacturing Systems AnalysisProfessor: Nour El Kadrie-mail: nelkadri@ site.uottawa.ca

  2. Sustainable Manufacturing Origins of Sustainable Manufacturing: Sustainability Sustainable Manufacturing Concepts & Examples Principles of Sustainability         Methods/Guidelines/Regulations        Metrics/Indicators Tools    

  3. Origins of Sustainable Manufacturing: Sustainability Manufacturing Consumables Workforce Tools Product Complexity Impacts Facilities Part Precision

  4. Sustainable Manufacturing • Manufacturing is known as a “process by which materials are removed, conserved, and added for the purpose of making products.” [Dorfeld, 2008] This has traditionally been an inefficient process which is resource and energy intensive and has not yet reached a sustainable state. • There are many contemporary frameworks which exist to guide understanding and application of sustainable practices in the world of manufacturing. There are also many tools, methodologies and collections of metrics used to apply these frameworks. • Sustainable Manufacturing • principles • methods • metrics Principles, Methods & Metrics Social, Economic & Environmental Themes

  5. Sustainable Manufacturing Concepts & Examples • Principles embody certain collections of values which have come to be associated with sustainability concerns at different scopes and scales. • (Analytical) methods, (action-oriented) guidelines/scorecards/criteria/decision-making strategies and (evaluatory) regulations/standards are guided by principles. Some agencies create a variety of principles, methods, standards, and regulations that work to address their cause throughout the product lifecycle. • Collections of metrics are used by methods and make up regulations • The values embedded in all of these concepts evolve from sustainability's core which requires balancing issues related to ecology/environment, economy/employment and equity/equality Principles Design Guidelines Scorecards, Checklists & Criteria Analytical methods Regulations & Standards Metrics

  6. Guide analysis and action: Principles Design Principles of Ecological Design Design for Disassembly Community/Labor &Ecology Houston Principles Waste Reduction (Affects the Biosphere and Business) Circular Economy Cradle to Cradle Industrial Ecology Management of Natural Resources in the Biosphere and in Commerce (Managing Impact while Balancing Interests and Values) Precautionary principle Natural Step 5 Capitals Model Triple Bottom Line Environmental Health & Safety Green Chemistry Toxicology Definitions SCP - Sustainable Packaging Wal-mart - Sustainable Packaging SPA – Sustainable Packaging Sustainable Biomaterials Collaborative – Sustainable Packaging Source: Edwards, A. R. The sustainability revolution. New Society Publishers. 2002

  7. Houston Principles Purpose: “Remind the public that the original purpose behind the creation of corporations was to serve the public interest Seek stricter enforcement of labor laws and advocate for new laws to guarantee working people their right to form organizing. Make workplaces, communities and the planet safer by reducing waste and greenhouse gas emissions. Demand that global trade agreements include enforceable labor and environmental standards. Promote forward-thinking business models that allow for sustainability over the long term while protecting working people, communities, and the environment.” • State that the future of a healthy economy and environment are tied, and that labor, environmental and community groups need to work together to take action against corporate power, the undermining of democratic processes and ensure that interests in long-term sustainability are the aim of short-term actions. • Created to hold corporations accountable for their impact on: • Working people, • Communities and • The Environment

  8. Cradle to Cradle In Cradle to Cradle, McDonough and Braungart (2002) note that a regenerative environment, like a cherry tree, is sustainable. It is a closed loop where Waste (of the system)=(the same system’s) Food. A manufacturing system can function under those same ideals. This concept stresses eco-effectiveness, quality prior to quantity, and biological and technical resource cycles which recycle in a manner that instead of “downcycling” the quality of materials, upcycles or regenerates. “The goal is a delightfully diverse safe and just world with clean air soil power and water economically, equitably, ecologically and elegantly enjoyed.” Source: Cradle to Cradle by William McDonough & Michael Braungart North Point Press, 2002

  9. Sustainable Packaging Coalition “to advocate and communicate a positive, robust environmental vision for packaging and to support innovative, functional packaging materials and systems that promote economic and environmental health through supply chain collaboration” – Sustainable Packaging Coalition Sustainable packaging: Is beneficial, safe & healthy for individuals and communities throughout its life cycle; Meets market criteria for performance and cost; Is sourced, manufactured, transported, and recycled using renewable energy; Maximizes the use of renewable or recycled source materials; Is manufactured using clean production technologies and best practices; Is made from materials healthy in all probable end of life scenarios; Is physically designed to optimize materials and energy; Is effectively recovered and utilized in biological and/or industrial cradle to cradle cycles. Source: http://www.sustainablepackaging.org/about_sustainable_packaging.asp

  10. Wal-Mart’s Sustainable Packaging Principles Goals: Reduce packaging across global supply chain by 5 percent by 2013 ($3.4 billion of savings) “The primary goal of the Packaging Sustainable Value Network is to be packaging neutral by 2025, which means all packaging recovered or recycled at our stores and Clubs will be equal to the amount of packaging used by the products on our shelves.” Also: 100% Renewable Energy, Zero Waste, Sustain Environment and Resources Principles: “7 R’s” Remove Reduce Reuse Renew(able) Recycle(able) Revenue Read Image from “The Greening of Wal-Mart” Source: http://walmartstores.com

  11. Sustainable Packaging Alliance -Sustainable Packaging Principles 4 sustainability principles need to be met by packaging: effective - provide social and economic benefits; efficient - provide benefits by using materials, energy and water as efficiently as possible; cyclic - be recoverable through industrial or natural systems; and safe - non-polluting and non-toxic. Source:http://www.sustainablepack.org/research/subpage.aspx?id=7&PageID=10

  12. Sustainable Biomaterials Collaborative They define a sustainable biomaterial as: (1) sourced from sustainably grown and harvested cropland or forests, (2) manufactured without hazardous inputs and impacts, (3) healthy and safe for the environment during use, and (4) designed to be reutilized at the end of their intended use such as via recycling or composting. Core principles include: Reduce the amount of material, product and packaging used; Eliminate single-use products that can be neither recycled or composted; Avoid fossil-fuel-based materials in favor of materials and products derived from renewable feedstocks; Address sustainability across the life cycle of the material: the growing of the feedstock, manufacturing of the biomaterial and final product, using the product and reclaiming the material at the end of its original use; Define sustainability to include issues of environment, health, and social and economic justice; Design and use products that are reusable, recyclable or compostable; Encourage agricultural systems that are sustainable for farmers, the environment, farm workers and communities; Support small- to mid-sized family owned and operated farms; Do not use genetically modified organisms in agricultural feedstock production; Use chemicals that meet the 12 Principles of Green Chemistry Avoid engineered nanomaterials and chemicals that have not been tested for environmental and public health effects across the lifecycle; and Decentralize production and buy local to reduce the environmental footprint of production, transportation, and consumption.

  13. “We call it Plan A because there is no Plan B.” – Marks & Spencer A 5 year plan based on 100 Points 5 Pillars, each with a primary goal for 2012: Climate Change - Become carbon neutral Waste - Send no waste to landfill Sustainable Raw Materials - Extend sustainable sourcing Health - Help improve the lives of people in our supply chain Fair Partner - Help customers and employees live a healthier life-style Goals with Regard to Packaging Reduce Use of Packaging by 25 % Use materials from sustainable or recycled sources (cardboard, metal, glass and plastic) Restrict range of materials to ones that are easy to recycle or compost Print simple symbols on packaging Reduce use of carrier beds by 33% and make all bags from recycled plastics Source: http://plana.marksandspencer.com

  14. Methods Action-oriented Design Guidelines SPC WRAP Wal-Mart Package Modeling Johnson&Johnson IPEN Guidelines Scorecards, Checklists & Criteria Wal-Mart Scorecard SCJohnson Analytical Methods Lifecycle Analysis (Process,EIO, Hybrid) Footprints (Ecological, Carbon, Water) SPC COMPASS SPA Evaluative Regulations & Standards European Commission Extended Producer Responsibility Environmental Product Declaration Sustainable Product Standard Ecolabeling Management Tools Strength Weakness Opportunities Threats Analysis (SWOT Analysis) Environmental management system Integrated chain management (ICM) Design guidelines Oriented around principles Meant to be simple Aided by decision-making tools Often voluntary – used by private companies, gov and ngo Scorecards Quantitative Often used to check progress Hard to compare tradeoffs Implicit assumptions Innovative changes often not captured Analytical tools Company specific data, processes, assumptions etc. Used to track improvement Regulations Give direction or target for industry Specific goal(s) (EOL, waste etc) Top-down rather than bottom-up approach Slide from: http://me.berkeley.edu/lmas/LMAS_Web/lmas/Presentations

  15. Design Guidelines Includes various design strategy sections: Design sustainably Design for transport Design with environmental best practice Design with fair labor and trade practices Design with renewable virgin materials Design for reuse Design for recycling Design for composting Source: http://www.sustainablepackaging.org/projects.asp

  16. WRAP’s Guide to Evolving Packaging Design Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) runs programs to support UK government legislation and private initiatives. Design Guidelines focus on waste reduction and material checklists, specifically: Waste hierarchy is applied to packaging The material checklist weighs pros and cons of each material • Future plans include aiming for specific goals beyond waste reduction, (incorporating measures of “carbon, recycled content, recyclability and behavioral change.”) [Five Winds International]

  17. Responsible Packaging Code of Practice From the UK, 2nd ed. in 2003. 7 parameters: Function of packaging through the supply chain Honesty in presentation Convenience in use Instructions, guidance and information Legal requirements Health, safety and consumer protection Environmental aspects Innovation in materials and products (resource efficiency) System considerations (packaging should improve sustainability of system and reduce was through system) Space and weight efficiency (for transportation) Re-use Process waste (at all points in supply chain) Best practice with materials (enable recovery) Energy recovery and material recycling Litter Source: http://www.incpen.org/pages/pv.asp?p=incpen14

  18. ’s Sustainable Packaging Scorecard Scorecard is based on the MERGE Tool template A supplier’s score, whether for secondary, tertiary or primary packaging follows this formula: 15% based on carbon dioxide per ton of production (only material manufacturing emissions are measured) 15% based on material value 15% based on product-to- package ratio 15% based on cube utilization 10% based on transportation 10% based on recycled content 10% based on recovery value 5% based on renewable energy 5% based on innovation

  19. SCJ GreenlistTM Packaging Criteria Rates raw materials on 8 criteria (focus on material, supplier practices and product EOL) Packaging Minimization Design for Recyclability Design for Reusability Sound Materials Selection Increased Use of Post Consumer Recycled Content Use of Renewable Resources Selection of Printing Methods and Materials Selection of Environmentally Conscious Supply Partners Each of these criteria has additional metrics associated with different packaging materials (glass, paper, rigid plastic, metal). Final score is made by averaging each criteria score Products are categorized on a “better,” “best” scale Used to phase out materials, and will license to others Source www.scjohnson.com/community/greenlist.asp

  20. Life Cycle Analysis Three scopes Cradle to gate Cradle to grave Cradle to cradle Three types Process LCA (addresses environmental inputs and outputs) EIO LCA (addresses economic inputs and outputs) Hybrid

  21. Process LCA vs. Hybrid LCA Economic Input-Output LCA Strengths bottom-up approach Focus on environmental impacts of individual components/products detail-oriented Weaknesses Does not include second order, only on-site data/processes Identification of boundaries of analysis is more difficult for large organizations Current best practice Embeds process systems inside input-output tables There is danger of double counting Strengths top-down approach able to use economic tables sector-focused large picture, grand scheme view Weaknesses assumes price, output and carbon homogeneity for sectors sectors can only be split up to examine so far

  22. Ecological Footprints An ecological footprint is a measure of resource management/use which refers to the amount of global hectares* required to sustain the life/practices being examined. Global hectares are hectares with average global productivity. The measure is calculated by comparing the biological resources available in a given region (accounting for its ability to create food and absorb waste using status quo technology and practices) to resource demands of an activity/population Ecological Footprint Standards have been developed and adopted by the majority of users. Details of these standards are available at www.footprintstandards.org, which is managed by the Global Footprint Network. Standards help to address calculation nuances, including conversions, measure of land/sea parcels, address nuclear power, varying data sources, import/export data and biodiversity etc. Origin of the per capita ecological footprint (EF) (to highlight differences in lifestyles), carbon footprint (emphasizing the climate change trigger Co2), water footprint (water-centric metric) Similar to a metric of a more complete life cycle analysis but for the conversion to global hectares. Use with the Living Planet Index of biodiversity from the WWF, or a adaptation of the footprint like Lenzen & Murray’s calculation for Australia is suggested in order to compensate for the metric’s omissions.

  23. Carbon Footprints A carbon footprint calculation measures the total amount of carbon dioxide emissions caused by the activity/instance being measured. This includes direct and indirect emissions. Scope varies “As commonly used today, for example, the term ‘carbon footprint’ often refers to the number of tonnes of carbon emitted by a given person or business during a year, or to the tonnes of carbon emitted in the manufacture and transport of a product. In Ecological Footprint accounts, the ‘carbon Footprint’ measures the amount of biological capacity, in global hectares, demanded by human emissions of fossil carbon dioxide.” - Global Footprint Standard Others may address all GHG, only carbon, include/exclude CO, and reflect lifecycle of goods and services (Haven, 2007) Measures differ "weight" vs. "footprint“ Weight already used in calculations, therefore it does not require additional conversions to area measures Emphasizes need for carbon “diets”

  24. Water Footprint Calculations require determining three different water footprints: blue water = surface water and ground water green water = rainwater stored in the soil as soil moisture. In the 2 above cases, the associated footprint is the volume of water that evaporated from the water type’s total. The grey water footprint is the volume of polluted water that associates with the production of all goods and services for the individual or community. “The water footprint of a nation is defined as the total volume of freshwater that is used to produce the goods and services consumed by the people of the nation. Since not all goods consumed in one particular country are produced in that country, the water footprint consists of two parts: use of domestic water resources and use of water outside the borders of the country.” - [Hoekstra, A.Y. 2007,p 36] The concept was created to serve as an indicator of water use, as related to consumption. The calculation takes into account direct and indirect use and is calculated by volume evaporated/polluted in a period of time. It is related to the concept of virtual water, “defined as the volume of water required to produce a commodity or service.”

  25. BASF Eco-efficiency Analysis Tool A decision-making analytical tool which uses LCA standards Notes economic , environmental and social metrics 6 environmental parameters: Raw materials consumption Energy consumption Land use Air and water emissions and disposal methods Potential toxicity Potential risks

  26. European Directive 94/62/EC on Packaging and Packaging Waste Requires that systems to deal with used packaging must be created to meet % goals by weight. For example: “by no later than 31 December 2011, between 55 and 80% by weight of packaging waste to be Recycled” A target-setting process is repeated every five years to keep the goals up to date. Focuses attention on: Total amount of packaging recovered, recycled or incinerated Packaging volume and weight Minimize noxious and other hazardous substances and materials Legal requirements for limits of cadmium, hexavalent chromium (chrome IV), lead and mercury Compostability Biodegradability European Standards Institute (CEN) created 6 standards to help companies improve the environmental status of their packaging. Addressed: manufacturing, composition reuse, recycling, energy recovery, composting, and the application of the management systems approach.

  27. Common Elements Only a few organizations worked to create principles, methods and metrics meant to support a coordinated vision Social indicators of sustainability were largely ignored Ability to provide guidance and educate at the same time, in a time effective manner was lacking Wide audiences made targeted guidance (whether for consumers, or on material use for designers etc.) rare There is a lack of procedural guidance for action and decision making, rather than high-level suggestions on examining the entire product system. Different regulatory traditions influence effectiveness Information gathered by relevant agents is not always freely available Striking the balance between promoting change, facilitating change, and measuring change had not been reached Methodologies included a collection of important metrics/indicators Large investments in time and upkeep are required Varying levels of academic rigor The methods were created by varied stakeholders and often for multiple audiences

  28. Metrics/Indicators Importance Data to information Inferences from quantitative analysis An indicator is a qualitative value which can be assigned different metrics and a metric can be calculated in different ways sustainablemeasures.com notes 4 ways to organize indicators: Category or issue lists – easy to comprehend Goal/indicator matrix – emphasis comprehensiveness Driving force-state-response tables – emphasis on impact Endowments, liabilities, current results, and processes table categories- emphasis on longer term Issues with measures – much depends on use How variables are weighted or optimized, Picking the right number to use can be difficult Openness and transparency increases credibility Source: http://www.sustainablemeasures.com

  29. Sustainable Metrics Project Recently launched Developing a core set of performance indicators to measure the sustainability of packaging and packaging systems. Will be published after feedback from SPC members

  30. Collections of Metrics International UN UN Indicators of Sustainable Development Localized U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA’s) Science Advisory Board NGO Cradle to Cradle Certification Matrix Global Reporting Initiative Living Planet Report Global Footprint Redefining Progress Industry Metrics from the Wal-mart Scorecard SCJ Greenlist Packaging Criteria for Specific Materials MERGE Metrics

  31. Tools/ Software There are many tools and software available. Tools Asbey The Environmental Impact Estimator - by the ATHENA™ Sustainable Materials Institute. BEES 3.0 - by National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST) Building and Fire Research Laboratory. CMLCA - by Centre of Environmental Science (CML) - Leiden University.. Sustainable Packaging Coalition- COMPASS Eco-Indicator 99 - by PRé Consultants. ECO-it 1.3 - by PRé Consultants. EcoScan 3.0 - by TNO Industrial Technology. Economic Input-Output Life Cycle Assessment - by Green Design Initiative of Carnegie Mellon. EDIP PC-tool (http://www.mst.dk/activi/08030000.htm) - by Danish EPA. The Environmental Impact Estimator - by the ATHENA™ Sustainable Materials Institute. EPS 2000 Design System - by Assess Ecostrategy Scandinavia AB. GaBi 4 Software System and Databases - by PE Europe GmbH and IKP University of Stuttgart. GEMIS (Global Emission Model for Integrated Systems) - by Öko-Institut. GREET Model- The U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Transportation IVAM LCA Data 4.0 - by IVAM. KCL-ECO 4.0 - by KCL. LCAiT 4 - by CIT Ekologik. LCAPIX - by KM Limited. MIET 3.0 - Missing Inventory Estimation Tool - by Centre of Environmental Science (CML). REGIS - by Sinum. SimaPro 7 - by PRé Consultants. SPOLD Data Exchange Software - by The Society for Promotion of Life-cycle Assessment. TEAM™ - by Pricewaterhouse Coopers Ecobilan Group. Umberto - by Institute for Environmental Informatics, Hamburg. WISARD™ - by Pricewaterhourse Coopers Ecobilan Group.

  32. Tools • Data • The Association of Plastics Manufacturers in Europe (APME) • The Boustead Model 5.0 - by Boustead Consulting. • The ecoinvent Centre - The Swiss Centre for Life Cycle Inventories central database of LCI data and life cycle impact assessment (LCIA) methods data. • IDEMAT 2005 - by Delft University of Technology. • Life-Cycle Inventory Database - by the National Renewable Energy Laboratory. • SPINE@CPM - by CPM -

  33. Summary: Themes The influence of qualitative principles can be directly and indirectly seen through design guidelines, analytical methodologies, and regulations. Methods can address economic, environmental or equity concerns, with unique scopes and emphasis Approaches, users, and lifecycle stages covered are varied Tools are numerous and for as many purposes and audiences as there are methods There is no one solution Identification of goals, scope, audience is crucial to developing benchmarks and quantitative indicators Necessities are not often distinguished from best practices

  34. Final Thought: Complex Tradeoffs “Would a carbon label on every product help us?” he asked. “I wonder. You can feel very good about the organic potatoes you buy from a farm near your home, but half the emissions—and half the footprint—from those potatoes could come from the energy you use to cook them. If you leave the lid off, boil them at a high heat, and then mash your potatoes, from a carbon standpoint you might as well drive to McDonald’s and spend your money buying an order of French fries.” -Murlis, quoted in an article by M. Specter , “Big Foot.” The New Yorker. February 25, 2008

  35. Conclusion The packaging industry is not sustainable Motivating factors for packaging manufacturing changes include Regulatory Mandates (stick) Economic Advantage (carrot) Change is hindered by a vague regulatory environment, lack of informed customers and missing infrastructure Qualitative guidelines exists, but concrete quantitative guiding measures, optimized for sustainable packaging, are needed Further detailed analysis is needed to correlate qualitative concepts with quantitative metrics and parse best practices from necessities

  36. Journal of Manufacturing Science and Engineering Journal of Packaging Technology and Science Journal of Sustainable Product Design The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment http://www.scientificjournals.com/sj/lca European Platform on Life Cycle Assessment http://lca.jrc.ec.europa.eu/ Ecoinvent – Swiss Center For life cycle inventories http://www.ecoinvent.ch/ Journal of Cleaner Production? International Journal of Environmental Technology and Management Australasian Bioplastics Association (ABA www.carbonlabelca.org http://www.wrap.org.uk/retail/case_studies_research/index.html Journal of sustainable product design Environmental Impact Assessment Review Management of Environmental Quality The International Journal of Life Cycle Assessment Journal of Cleaner Production Journal of Industrial Ecology Academic Journals

  37. Academic Departments • California Polytechnic State University • Clemson University www.clemson.edu/pkgsci • Fashion Institute of Technology www.fitnyc.edu • Indiana State University www.indstate.edu/imt/bs_pt.htm • Michigan State University School of Packaging www.packaging.msu.edu • Rochester Institute of Technology www.rit.edu/%7E719www/PROGRAMS/BS?ps.htm • San Jose State University www.engr.sjsu.edu • School for Military Packaging Technology www.smpt.apg.army.mil • University of California - Berkeley • University of Florida www.ifas.ufl.edu • University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign www.fshn.uluc.edu • University of Missouri-Rolla www.umr.edu • University of Wisconsin-Stout www.uwstout.edu/programs/bsp • Virginia Tech www.fst.vt.edu • Western Michigan University www.wmich.edu/pci/programs/papr_description.htm

  38. Conferences/Workshops • Natureworks LLC http://www.innovationtakesroot.com/ • Nutec: Nutrients - Upcycling - Triple Topline - Effectiveness - Community http://www.nutec.de/ • European Bioplastics Conference www.european-bioplastics.org • Sustainable Packaging Essentials http://www.sustainablepackaging.org/essentials/ • Sustainable Packaging Forum www.packstrat.com • (Past) Developing Sustainable Approaches to Design-Make-Serve Cambridge, UK

  39. Industry Publications & Forums • ADHESIVE/SEALENTS • Adhesive & Sealent Council • Pressure Sensitive Tape Council www.pstc.org • BIODEGRADABLE • Biodegradable Products Institute • CLOTH • Textile Bag manufactures association • GLASS • Glass Packaging Institute www.gpi.org • Glass Products Institute • Glass Technology Services (GTS): www.glass-ts.com • British Plastics Federation (BPF): www.bpf.co.uk

  40. Industry Publications & Forums • LABELS • Packaging and Label Gravure Association www.plga.com • Printing Industries of America, INC www.gain.net • Private Label Manufactures Association www.plma.ocom • METALS • The Vinyl Institute www.vinylinfo.org • Aluminum • Aluminum Association www.aluminum.org • Aluminum Foil Container Manufacturers Association afcma.org • Can Manufacturers Institute • Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries, Inc. www.isri.org • Metal Packaging Manufacturers Association (MPMA): www.mpma.org.uk • Steel Recycling Institute www.recylce-steel.org

  41. Industry Publications & Forums PACKAGING • Aseptic Packaging Council www.aseptic.org • http://www.packaging-gateway.com/ • Flexible Packaging Association • The Packaging Federation: www.packagingfedn.co.uk • The Packaging Solutions Advice Group (PSAG): www.psag.co.uk • Pro-Carton UK: www.procartonuk.com • Processing & Packaging Machinery Association (PPMA): www.ppma.co.uk • Institute of Grocery Distribution (IGD): www.igd.com • Institute of Packaging (IoP): www.pi2.org.uk • Institute of Packaging Professionals www.lopp.org • International Beverage Packaging association www.ibpa.org • European Carton Makers Association (ECMA): www.ecma.org • Industry Council for Packaging in the Environment (INCPEN): www.incpen.org • Liquid Food Carton Manufacturers Association (LFCMA): www.drinkscartons.com • Northa American Packaging Association www.paperbox.org • National Recycling Coalition www.nrc-recycle.org • National Resource Recovery Association www.nrra.net • National Association of Suppliers of Printing/Publishing Technology • Packaging and Industrial Films Association (PIFA): www.pifa.co.uk • Packaging Machinery Manufacturers Institute www.pmmi.org • Produce Marketing Association www.pma.com • Retail Packaging Manufacturers Association • World Packaging Organization www.world packaign.org

  42. Industry Publications & Forums PLASTIC • American Chemistry Council • Association of Postconsumer Plastic Recyclers www.american chemistry.com/plastics • Center for Plastic Recycling research • Film and Bag Federation wwww.plasticsindustry.org • Rigid Plastic Packaging Group • Society of Plastics • Society of the Plastics Industry www.plasticsindustry.org • National Association for PET Container Resources www.napor.com • National Association of Container Distributors www.nacd.net • Plastic Shipping Container Institute www.pscionline.org • Plastics Foodservice Packaging Group www.polystyrene.org • Society of the Plastics Industries www.socplas.org • Society of Plastics Engineers www. 4spe.org

  43. Industry Publications & Forums FOAM • Alliance of Foam packaging Recyclers www.epspackaging.org • Solid waste Association of North America www.swana.org • Closure Manufacturers Association www.closuremanufactuers.org • The Tube Council www.tube.org • Composite Can & Tube Institute • Consumer Products Manufactures Association www.cpma-global.org • Contract Packaging Association www.contractpackaging.org • Design Management Institute www.dmi.org • Environmental Industry Association www.envasns.org • Flexible Intermediate Bulk Container Association www.fibca.com • Flexible Packaging Association www.flexpack.org • Food Marketing Institute www.fmi.org • Food Processing Suppliers Association • Foodservice & Packaging Institute • Gravure Association of America www.gaa.org • Grocery Manufacturers of America www.gmabrands.com • International Safe Transit Association www.ista.org • Keep America Beautiful www.kab.org

  44. Industry Publications & Forums • Fibre Box Association www.fibrebox.org • Forest Products Society www. Forestprod.org PULP/PAPER/FIBER/WOOD • Association of Independent Corrugated Converters www.aiccbox.org • American Forest and Paper Association • Boxboard Research & Development Association • Confederation of Paper Industries (CPI): www.recycledpaper.org.uk • Fibre Box Association • International Molded Fibre Association • National Wooden Pallet & Container Association • Paper Recycling Coalition • Paperboard Packaging Council • Recycled Paperboard Alliance • Recycled Paperboard Technical Association • Reusable Pallet and Container Coalition • TAPPI – Technical Association of the Pulp & Paper Industry • Tag & Label Manufacturers Institute Inc. www. Tlmi.com • National Wooden Pallet & Container Association www.palletcentral.com

  45. Government Organizations • U.S. Business Council for Sustainable Development • CA Integrated Waste Management Board Robert Carlson • EPA – Office of Solid Waste • Department of Environment, Food & Rural Affairs (DEFRA) www.defra.gov.uk

  46. NGOs • Container Recycling Institute • Environmental Defense • Green Blue • Green Peace • IERE • Keep America Beautiful • National Recycling Coalition • Rocky Mountain Institute • The Design Council www.design-council.org.uk • Envirowise: www.envirowise.org.uk • Forest Stewardship Council (FSC): www.fsc.org • Forum for the Future: www.forumforthefuture.org.uk • London remade / Closed Loop London: www.londonremade.com

  47. Non-Sustainability factors of importance to manufacturers & consumers • Price • Barrier protection: • Toughness • Tensile strength • Thickness • Seal-ability • Permeability (oxygen can cause changes in product color, odor and taste; and nutrient loss, product rancidity and microbial spoilage) • Surface friction • Shrink-ability • Aesthetics: color, transparency, & clarity

  48. More References • http://me.berkeley.edu/lmas/LMAS_Web/lmas/Presentations/GreenMfgOverviewSlides_04_2007.pdf • http://www.asje.org/principles.html • Principals: D. Dornfeld (ME), PI, M. Taylor (GSPP) Berkeley, J. Greene (ME) CSU-Chico

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