Title: Shrink: Paper Efficiency Project PEP Talk Packaging
1Shrink Paper Efficiency ProjectPEP
TalkPackaging
shrinkpaper.org
- Mandy Haggith - hag_at_environmentalpaper.eu
- Jane Skelton - Jane.Skelton_at_sainsburys.co.uk
2European Environmental Paper Network
3Common Vision
- The Environmental Paper Networks in Europe and
North America (gt 100 NGOs) have a shared Vision
for Transforming the Pulp and Paper Industry - Reduce consumption
- Reduce reliance on virgin forest fibre
- Ensure social responsibility
- Source fibre responsibly
- Ensure clean production
4We want to protect this
5from becoming this
6and minimise this.
7Main impacts of paper-making
- Climate Change
- Forest Destruction
- Energy Use
- Waste
- Water Use
- Pollution
- Plantations
- Illegal Logging
- Human Rights Abuses
8The shrink project (2012-13)
- 60 UK organisations being assessed and urged to
take action on paper efficiency, 10 each of - Supermarkets
- Catalogue retailers
- Financial firms
- Utilities (gas, phone etc)
- Governmental bodies
- Universities
- The scorecard will be published in July 2013
- New website, more paper saving case studies
- Motivational seminars and PEP talks
- Paper Utility, Paper vs Digital and Packaging
- Paper Vapour (paper and climate change), 9 July,
London
9Packaging some starting points
- Lets make one thing clear from the start the
Shrink project is not advocating that companies
should shift from paper to plastics or other
materials, unless by doing so they can prove they
have reduced their ecological footprint. - Packaging has many functions
- it keeps good safe from breakages and
contamination, - it enables them to be more easily transported,
- it attracts customers to them
- it conveys information.
- Smart design maintains these functions while
maximising efficiency.
10Packaging a big opportunity for paper efficiency
- Almost half of Europes paper consumption is
packaging. - Global annual sector CO2e emissions from paper
are 2500 MTonnes - 8 of global emissions (from
Climate for Ideas). - Reducing packaging could produce really
substantial carbon emission reductions, helping
to deliver the UK target of cuts of 34 by 2020.
11Case study 1 Patagonia
- Used to pack their thermal baselayers (long johns
and vests) in cellophane and paper packets. - They shifted to sushi rolls with just a
cardboard sash. They saved tonnes of waste and
sales rocketed because customers could feel what
they were buying. - The original packaging was getting between the
customer and the product.
12Case study 2 Hewlett Packard
- They redesigned printer transportation packaging,
replacing cardboard boxes with heavy internal
buffering by re-usable shelving units wrapped in
thin see-through plastic. - Packaging volume was reduced by gt 90.
- Breakages in transit reduced by 5, because
people handling them could see that what is
inside is fragile. - By taking away the package, you can reduce damage
to the contents.
13Case study 3 Duchy Originals
- They redesigned their chocolate boxes, to reduce
the weight of the packaging by 48. This
efficiency produced a sleeker, higher quality
appearance product.
They saved 8.9 tonnes of packaging, saving 231
trees, 890,000 litres of water, 58 tonnes of
carbon emissions and 10.7 tonnes of other air,
water and solid pollution.
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19Thanks for listening and for caring about your
impact on the environment! More information
on packaging herehttp//shrinkpaper.org/packagin
g/The environmental paper calculator is here
http//c.environmentalpaper.org/home Were
happy to answer any questions you may have.