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Packaging machinery revs Fine Foods' production

Much like drivers appreciate the performance, handling, and flexibility of the finest sports cars, Italian contract manufacturer/packager Fine Foods opts for similar characteristics in the packaging machinery it specifies.

Pw 8292 Filling2

As manufacturers speed their products to market, it increases the deadline pressures on contract manufacturers/packagers such as Fine Foods N.T.M. (New Technology Manufacturing) S.p.A. In turn, Fine Foods relies on packaging machinery for the flexibility and output it needs to meet the demands of the manafactures who are its customers.

“In recent years, customers have become more demanding, requiring quicker turnaround time than before,” says Marco Eigenmann, managing director of the Bergamo, Italy contract manufacturer/packager of pharmaceuticals, nutraceuticals, as well as a limited number of food products.

Fine Foods does not manufacture any of its own products.

About half of the firm’s business is with customers in the United States, 40% with companies in Fine Foods’ home country of Italy, with the remaining 10% from other geographic regions.

The company estimates that 60% of the pharmaceuticals it contract manufactures and packages are ultimately sold by prescription and 40% is over-the-counter. Nearly all of these products are solids, typically powders. None of the products are refrigerated or frozen. Shelf life ranges from 24 to 36 months, according to Daniele Sala, plant director.

Focus on productivity

Fine Foods emphasizes efficient customer turnaround, and that focus is evident in the fact that two-thirds of its 180 employees are dedicated to production tasks, including packaging. The company operates both a pharmaceutical and a 21,000 sqm nutraceutical plant, both within about 10 miles of one another. This year, the company is expanding the  pharmaceutical plant to that same size. In all, the company runs 24 packaging lines, with a considerable investment in equipment from Marchesini Group S.p.A. (www.marchesini.com).

“Our strength is in sachet [pouch] filling,” notes Eigenmann. “The sachet filling equipment we use is all from Marchesini. We have their machines in both of our plants. In the pharmaceutical business, we are for sure one of the biggest companies in high-production sachet filling. We normally operate in two shifts. We run five days a week and also on Sunday mornings if needed. We do not have any of our own products.  We are an independent company and we do not want to be competitors to our customers.”

Sachet/pouch filling at Fine Foods

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