P&G targets zero waste from manufacturing

By Deanna Utroske

- Last updated on GMT

Related tags Recycling

P&G targets zero waste from personal care and CPG manufacturing
As the New Year got underway the CPG and personal care company announced an initiative to further reduce, recycle, and repurpose manufacturing waste. It’s a strategy that presents both new challenges and new opportunities.

“Since 2010, we’ve been working toward a vision of sending zero manufacturing and consumer waste to landfills,”​ Shailesh Jejurikar, executive sponsor for sustainability and president of global fabric care for the company, tells the press. “This announcement marks another step on that journey,” ​he says.

The announcement specifies that P&G will send no production manufacturing waste directly to landfills after 2019.

Explicating the initiative further, Jejurikar says, “We are accelerating progress toward our long term vision and pushing ourselves to do more – with less waste.”

Well begun

In a press release about the new waste-eliminating objective, P&G reports that already 56% of the company’s manufacturing sites have met the zero-waste objective. Putting the remaining task into perspective, the company writes, “This means eliminating or beneficially re-using about 650,000 metric tons of waste…that would typically go to landfills.”

For the multinational CPG company, it's a global project. Individual product manufacturing facilities in Germany, UK, Poland, Japan, Mexico, Spain, Egypt, Belgium, Ireland, Vietnam, Hungary, Indonesia, Czech, Romania, Singapore, Korea, Thailand, Turkey, and Pakistan operate with zero waste. In two countries, India and China, P&G is quite close to having all facilities operating with zero-waste.

How to

P&G is using three avenues to avoid depositing its production waste material into landfills. The company will either find a way to turn waste into a finished product, recycle it (in-house or externally), or facilitate the re-use of the material by forging partnerships with entities that can put the waste to good use.

Finding such opportunities requires creativity. But with the right sort of thinking an ingenious waste-repurposing partnership can be a new revenue stream. “Our employees are using the same innovation skills and zero loss mentality they put into manufacturing our products to drive out waste,”​ notes Yannis Skoufalos, P&G president of global product supply.

He points to a couple of illustrative partnerships: “For example surfactants from Head and Shoulders waste in China are repurposed into carwash, while scrap from our Tampax plant in Canada is used to make emergency spill containment products. These innovative external partnerships enable our sites to see scrap not as waste, but as potential worth for someone else.”  

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