Tetra Pak has released its 2015 sustainability report, which highlights the company’s achievements in environmental performance, social responsibility, and good governance over the past year
In its update on progress in meeting sustainability objectives Tetra Pak highlights a series of activities the group carried out in 2015.
• The Tetra Rex Bio-based carton hit the shelves in January 2015 as the world’s first fully renewable package manufactured solely from materials derived from plants.
• The revolutionary Tetra Pak® E3 was launched in June. This filling machine uses electron beams, rather than hydrogen peroxide, to sterilise packaging material, which results in significant energy savings and reduced environmental impact.
• The company has made good progress on implementing a global operational health and safety (OHS) management system. The target is to achieve OHSAS 18001 certification for all of Tetra Pak manufacturing sites by the end of 2016. So far 50% have been certified, which is up from 42% in 2013.
• Tetra Pak maintained its support of Dairy Hub projects in Bangladesh, Kenya, Nicaragua and Sri Lanka in 2014 and began a new project in Senegal in early 2015. Through these projects, the company helps to secure long-term supply of locally produced quality milk in developing countries. During the past year, as a result of Dairy Hubs, particular progress has been made in Bangladesh, where a typical dairy farmer’s net monthly income has reached USD245, up from USD70–90 in 2012.
• During the first quarter of 2015, Tetra Pak’s Deeper in the Pyramid (DiP) unit launched more than 20 new products designed specifically for the low income consumer segment in over 10 countries, while increasing the number of packages sold by 12%, compared to the same period last year.
“At Tetra Pak, our approach to sustainability derives from our brand promise: Protects what’s good,” said Dennis Jönsson, president and CEO, Tetra Pak Group.
“That means protecting food, through our processing and packaging activities. But it also means protecting people, both inside and outside the company. And it means protecting futures: our planet’s, our customers’ and our own. “We have long realised the importance of balancing each of these commitments and that the only way to achieve this is through collaboration, innovation, determination and a strong sense of obligation across the entire company.
“With the announcement of the UN 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, sustainability will be an area ever more integrated into the activities of companies worldwide. We are committed to working with our customers to meet the challenges that the UN has set out.” As part of Tetra Pak’s annual Communication on Progress (COP), a condensed version of the report has been submitted to the UN Global Compact, which demonstrates how the company is integrating the 10 principles on environmental performance, labour and human rights practices, and anti-corruption into its business strategy and day-to-day operations.
Tetra Pak considers itself the world’s leading food processing and packaging solutions company.
Working closely with its customers and suppliers, it has declared an aim of providing safe, innovative and environmentally sound products that each day meet the needs of hundreds of millions of people in more than 170 countries around the world.
With more than 23,000 employees based in over 80 countries, IHS has committed to responsible industry leadership and a sustainable approach to business.
The company sees its motto, ‘Protects what’s good’ as a reflection of its vision to make food safe and available, everywhere. More information about Tetra Pak is available at www.tetrapak.com