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P&G provides leadership in sustainable packaging journey

With more than 300 brands sold all around the world, Procter & Gamble utilizes just about every packaging material available. Tony Burns shares his views on how P&G rises to the sustainable packaging challenge.

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We can reach a state where the use of sustainable packaging is the rule rather than the exception if we focus on a handful of major challenges. That’s the opinion of Tony Burns, associate director, sustainability, for P&G’s Global Package and Device Development (GPDD) group. Burns is responsible for developing global packaging sustainability for the Cincinnati-based consumer packaged goods (CPG) powerhouse.

Burns believes that four major, game-changing challenges exist in the drive to package sustainability:

Supply chain reinvention. “We know that our existing supply chains put performance burdens on our packages that limit our ability to reduce material use,” says Burns. “This is a long-term goal and will require industry-wide leadership and collaboration, but there are huge benefits if we can reduce the forces on our packages throughout the supply chain.”

Recycling. “We need to increase reach and rate,” he says. “It’s plain and simple—we are throwing valuable resources into landfills that should be recycled. We need to change consumers’ mindsets and improve infrastructures to efficiently collect, separate, and sort materials in order to drive recycling. This is especially true in the United States.”

New materials. “New classes of materials are being developed as we speak. These materials offer the ability to significantly reduce the environmental impact of our packaging and also potentially reduce our dependence on sourcing petroleum-derived materials. They will not be ‘the’ solution, but will be an important tool in our packaging engineers’ and designers’ toolbox,” he says.

Industry standards for metrics and measures. “We absolutely need to drive to standardization in our metrics and measures as an industry or we will spend all of our time administering data instead of innovating,” says Burns.

Experience affords P&G a platform

It’s not merely the company’s sheer size and product reach that lend P&G a credible voice in sustainability, but its experience in delivering environmentally thoughtful packaged goods to the commercial market. In November 2008, P&G released its 10th Annual Sustainability Report (see sidebar, page 56). “We’ve worked on package sizing issues, lightweighting, and cost savings pertaining to packaging across all of our businesses for many years. Reducing our environmental impact is not new,” Burns says. “Now our sustainability efforts seek to consolidate into a standard approach across all of our diverse businesses and products.” That includes everything from research and development and innovation to working with suppliers to resource consumption at P&G facilities.

“Sustainability is at the core of everything we do in all of our business units; our sustainability focus is not just in packaging, but focuses throughout the entire product/packaging development area.” Burns says that it’s important to keep in mind that “packaging is a small part of the overall environmental footprint of a product. So why is there such a focus on packaging in the consumer goods area?

At times it does feel like packaging is becoming ‘the villain,’ when in reality it is a small player in the overall environmental footprint of the product. However, viewed through the lens of our consumers, packaging is the first thing and also the last thing that they experience with our brands. Therefore if it is important to our consumers, then it is important to us.”

P&G refers to consumers as “the boss,” so it makes sense that consumers push P&G’s sustainability efforts. “We want to make sure that packaging is thought of holistically with the product so that it delivers that product in its intended state through the supply chain to the consumer, serving its purpose from the standpoint of consumer usage all the way through disposal,” Burns says. “We have to begin with the basic premise that the product and package meet the needs of the consumers in the most sustainable manner possible, realizing early on in the development process that these decisions carry significant impact.”

Toward that end, the company has appointed sustainability experts—and in some areas teams of experts—on nearly all of its leading brands. Some brands have dedicated packaging engineers leading their sustainability efforts. In one example, packaging engineers redesigned the plastic bottles for Pantene Pro-V, reducing both package weight and material usage without any noticeable change for the consumer. Engineers project to save more than 450 metric tons of plastic per year—equal to more than 13 million Pantene Pro-V bottles. Another change to the pump dispenser in the Olay Total Effects bottle is expected to reduce 800,000 lb of plastic a year—equal to the weight of a Boeing 747.

“About 80 percent of our consumers tell us that environmental sustainability is important. That itself is reason for us to engage in this and to meet the needs of the consumers. They may not pay additional money right now for more sustainable packaging, but it’s important to them. Whatever benefits they are buying our brands for, we want to make sure that we package that in the most sustainable fashion possible,” says Burns.

A good example of listening to consumers is the new pack for the company’s Prilosec OTC heartburn treatment where two inner blister packs containing seven tablets each were replaced by one pack of 14, in virtually the same blister footprint (for the complete story, see the January/February issue of Healthcare Packaging magazine). This made usage easier for the consumer, while saving more than 500,000 lb of packaging material each year.

Key role for both materials and machinery

Satisfying consumers is key to any business, but the role of sustainable packaging is vital to P&G’s bottom line. P&G calls this sustainable sustainability—ensuring that any changes made in the name of sustainability also are viable long-term solutions to the company. It is indeed, a delicate balance, Burns acknowledges. But it’s one that P&G is managing with some solid wins.

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