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1
Nigel Bagley
Peter Alvarez
The Global Packaging Project:
A Global Language for
Packaging and
Sustainability2010 Conference
Malaysia
A framework and a measurement
system for our industry
2
Over-Packagingor Good Packaging?
3
Project Sponsors
Paul Polman
CEO, Unilever
Sir Terry Leahy
CEO, Tesco
4
Deliverables
The Role of Packaging
Framework: The Holistic View
-Protect
-Promote
-Inform
-Convenient
-Unitisation
-Handling
5
The Principles ofSustainability
The Role of Packaging
Framework: The Holistic View
-Environmental
-Economic
-Social
-Life Cycle
Approach
How Packaging Can Contribute to Improving
Sustainability
The Principles ofSustainability
The Role of Packaging
Framework: The Holistic View
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Increasing packaging material weight or volume
Negative
environmental impact
MINIMUM MATERIAL
MINIMUM
EVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
OVERPACKAGINGUNDERPACKAGING
OPTIMUM PACK DESIGN
1
The Innventia AB model
Optimum Packaging
Deliverables
7
Life Cycle Green House Gas Emissions
Core (supporting and correlating indicators linked)
The mass of GHGs released to the atmosphere during the sourcing or raw,
recycled and reused materials and the production, filling, transport and/or disposal
of packaging materials, packaging components or units of packaging.
Example: For each indicator…
Mass released per functional unit of final packaging material, packaging
components, packaging or time (expressed in CO2 equivalency).
• Kilograms / kilograms of final packaging material
• Kilograms / 1000 units of packaging
• Metric tons / year (based on production rate)
Measure all direct and indirect GHG emissions released during the growth, harvest or extraction and processing of raw materials,
collection and processing of recycled or reused materials, production of final packaging materials, conversion of final packaging materials into packaging components, assembly of packaging components into units of packaging, filling of packaging units, transport of raw, recycled and/or reused materials, final packaging materials, packaging components and/or units of packaging
and the end-of-life processing of packaging. Include direct and indirect GHG emissions from energy sources used to heat, cool and illuminate any facility space in which any of the operations specified above are performed. For additional guidance, refer to ISO standards 14040 and 14044, the 2006 IPCC Guidelines for National Greenhouse Gas Inventories and PAS 2050.
Do not include direct or indirect GHG emissions released during the transport of packaging that contains product. Do not include
GHG emissions released as a result of heating, cooling and illuminating facility space that is not used for packaging-related functions or activities, e.g., administrative offices, unless the facility is used exclusively to produce final packaging materials,
packaging components or units of packaging.
Definition
Metrics
Examples
What to Measure
What not to measure
Indicator
Type
8
Published June 2010
Emerging
Trends
Emerging
Trends
2020
Future Value
Chain
2020
Future Value
Chain
Sustaina-
bility
Sustaina-
bility
Global
Packaging
Global
Packaging
Climate Change
Work:
•Carbon
Measure-
ment•Defore
station•Refrige-
ration
•Consumer Engage-
ment
Climate Change
Work:
•Carbon
Measure-
ment•Defore
station•Refrige-
ration
•Consumer Engage-
ment
GSCPGSCP
Safety &
Health
Safety &
Health
H&WPrinciples
Commit-
ments
H&WPrinciples
Commit-
ments
Information
& Education
Information
& Education
Ageing
Population
Ageing
Population
Operational Excellence
New Ways of Working Together
Operational Excellence
New Ways of Working Together
Share our
SupplyChain
Share our
SupplyChain
Prepare our
People
Prepare our
People
Connect
Business Infor-
mation
Connect
Business Infor-
mation
Focus
on
Con-sumer
Focus
on
Con-sumer
Knowledge
Sharing
& People
Development
Knowledge
Sharing
& People
Development
Global
Summit
Global
Summit
Future Leaders
Future Leaders
GFSIGFSI
Consumer Goods Forum Strategic Pillars
9
The CGF/GPP and GS1
• Retailers and
manufacturers want
to leverage GS1
standards to support
the Sustainability
initiative.
17
• We need to work together to ensure the
standards properly support the Global Packaging Project (GPP) business requirements.
18
How do we move from pilots to practice?
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The Framework is in Place
So, what else is needed
The Framework is in Place
11
Business requirements
• The Consumer Goods Forum Global
Packaging Project will identify the business requirements and direction.
• GS1 will use the requirements to ensure
the standards meet the user business
requirements.
• The GS1 Global Standards Management
Process (GSMP) provides a mechanism
to ensure GS1 standards properly reflect the ongoing needs of the community.
21
GS1 Progress to date
• Completed scorecard
analysis, GS1 Canada and US
• GS1 Briefing Paper for Member Organizations
• GDSN initial assessment of capabilities
• Change Request entered into
the GSMP (CR 10-169)
12
Conclusions
• GPP is a building block for the wider Sustainability Work in the Consumer Goods Forum
• It’s success depends entirely on the willingness of our industry to work together and use the framework and measurement system as the basis for dialogue
Nigel Bagley
Peter Alvarez
The Global Packaging Project:
A Global Language for
Packaging and
Sustainability