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GreenBlue

Welcome Introduction: Charlotte Dreizen


11025643_10204729092281340_4179298475107216367_n-2Charlotte Dreizen joins the GreenBlue team as an intern focused on our growing composting initiatives. Charlotte comes to GreenBlue from George Washington University. Learn more about Charlotte in the interview below.

Tell us about your background:

Despite coming from a family of fierce New Yorkers, I’ve migrated progressively further South. Initially moving to Washington, DC to study International Environmental and Development Studies at George Washington University, I have also been lucky enough to work with various sustainability initiatives at higher-ed institutions and the US Green Building Council. Now, in Charlottesville, Virginia, I’m excited to rejoin the rowing world after a three-year hiatus and fulfill my mother’s dream for me to become a beekeeper by apprenticing an Italian master.

How did you become involved in sustainability?

After growing up in the ultra-walkable and sustainable Greenwich Village, I didn’t find life greener on the other side when I moved to the suburbs as a teenager. I knew immediately that a car-centric life where community gardens and sidewalks were replaced by fields of asphalt was not for me. Ever since, I have looked for ways to make myself and my communities happier, healthier, and more regenerative.

Happiness is….

Anything vertical and outdoors! Rock, ice, and alpine climbing are great mental and physical challenges and are my favorite ways to immerse myself in nature.

What are you looking forward to in your internship?

I’m absolutely thrilled to contribute to the development of the Sustainable Composting Collaborative, as well as research on the value of compostable packaging in Charlotte, NC. I’m looking forward to assisting in the creation of these two initiatives as both have huge potential to catalyze composting on a local, regional, and national scale. It will be exciting to see SPC’s very successful model of making packaging more sustainable broadly applied to compostable packaging more narrowly. In much the same way, value-oriented research on compostable packaging will provide localities with much needed quantitative information on the benefits of starting or expanding composting programs. It will be a privilege to help these programs get off the ground!

One composting myth that you would like to dispel:

That it’s hard! Despite the perception that composting may be confusing or complicated, very simple guidelines are all that is needed to divert food waste and packaging from landfills and give a new purpose to what would otherwise be “trash”. GreenBlue and organizations like it are making it easier than ever for consumers to have accessible composting drop-offs or to compost themselves, as well!
 

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GreenBlue

Welcome Introduction: Tesia Moore

Tesia Moore circleThis spring, Tesia Moore joins the GreenBlue team as an intern focused on the Charlottesville City Market  Composting Program. Tesia comes to GreenBlue as graduate of Stony Brook University and Green Mission Coordinator at Whole Foods Market Charlottesville. Learn more about Tesia in the interview below.

Tell us about your background.

I am a born and bred New Yorker. Growing up with an overflowing recycling bin and backyard compost pile, I became a strong advocate for recycling and resource conservation at a young age. This deep passion led me to Stony Brook University (SBU), where I studied Environmental Studies with a concentration in Waste Management. I devoted my 3 ½ years at SBU to educating the community about the importance of recycling and providing waste minimization tips. I am looking forward to a career in developing  solutions to our nation’s waste crisis!

What are you looking forward to in your internship?

I am very excited to spend my Saturdays at the vibrant Charlottesville City Market this season, educating market-goers on how to properly sort their waste and introducing them to at-home composting. I hope to build on the success of last season by working closely with market vendors to transition them away from disposables, and non-recyclable materials, to compostable ones. Additionally, I am very  eager to learn all I can about sustainable materials management from the experts here at GreenBlue!

What are your first impressions?

Walking into an open office with bright yellow walls, large windows, minimal lighting, and plants on every surface, I could not have been more excited to work in such a  natural, collaborative environment! With in-office compost bins, and a plethora of recycling bins for every type of recyclable material, I felt energized to know that I would be working with a group of people who truly care about their mission to “recover more.” Everyone has been so open and welcoming, I am really looking forward to working with a community of motivated environmentalists striving towards the same goal.

Happiness is….

To me happiness means living a life of passion and enjoying every moment of the ride! Working in the sustainability field brings me tremendous amount of joy and happiness. At the end of each day,  I feel a great sense of accomplishment knowing I am helping to address our nation’s complex waste issues, and helping to create a better environment and future.
Seeing the excitement on someone’s face when they realize that they were able to divert all of their waste away from the landfill brings a BIG smile to my face too!

Can you share one composting tip?

Green your morning routine by composting the remains from brewing your coffee or tea! Coffee grounds along with its paper-based liner can be tossed right into your compost bin. And don’t forget to add your tea leaves too. But before putting your whole tea bag in the compost bin, just be sure to check your box of tea to confirm the bag is comprised of natural fibers to ensure it will fully break down during the composting process.
 

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GreenBlue Sustainable Packaging Coalition

Behind the Scenes of the Method Soap Factory

Located in the South Side of Chicago, the Method Soap Factory was designed to be sustainable, literally, from the ground up. Built on a former brownfield site, the factory stands out with color awnings, a wind turbine and “solar trees” in the factory parking lot.
During SustPack 2016, SPC members and invited guests had the opportunity to tour the one-year-old factory. The site is also home to the Amcor bottling manufacturing, who makes many of their plastic bottle packages.

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Outside the South Side Chicago Factory

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The “South Side Soapbox” factory hopes to produce more than 70% of the company’s liquid cleaning products in the future.

A colorful wall made of Method’s gel handsoaps. All of Method’s PET bottles (hand wash, dish soap and spray cleaners) are made from 100% PCR.

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From left to right: Nina Goodrich, (GreenBlue Executive Director), Dr. Paul Fowler (Executive Director of Wisconsin Institute for Sustainable Technology), and Barbara Fowler (Conference Director, US Events, Smithers Pira)

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The factory is LEED Platinum-certified and is the only one of its kind in its industry, and only one of two in the U.S.

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GreenBlue Sustainable Packaging Coalition

The Art of Influence: Using the Concept of Return On Investment to Develop an Effective and Meaningful Corporate Sustainability Strategy

The notion that businesses should care about sustainability and already should have it embedded into their business model is now basically the norm. In 2016, companies who don’t have a well-articulated and specific sustainability plan are perceived as out-of-touch.
Some companies may already have sustainability goals, but perhaps those goals aren’t as ambitious as their competitors, or maybe the company hasn’t made a significant effort to develop realistic plans to actually meet those goals. In the words of Steve Rochlin of IO Sustainability, who presented on this topic at SustPack in Chicago, some companies “overpromise and underdeliver.”
Tensions around the value and progress of sustainability can also be observed within companies. Some professionals still encounter resistance and skepticism from other departments or executive leadership regarding the value of sustainability, and need ways to influence colleagues in order to overcome that hostility or doubt. Other professionals may already have internal buy-in for sustainability, but as a new aspect of their business that carries uncertainty, are struggling to implement it in a meaningful way.
To that end, Babson College’s Lewis Institute for Social Innovation and IO Sustainability released a comprehensive report about return on investment (ROI) for corporate sustainability, called Project ROI. What’s great about the report is that it gives sustainability professionals real data and real advice about how to articulate a case for sustainability at their companies based on the concept of ROI. The report identifies the following areas where corporate responsibility (CR) can provide potential value:

Excerpt from Project ROI: Defining the competitive and financial advantages of corporate responsibility and sustainability, Babson College and IO Sustainability. Download the report here.

You’ll see the data is staggering and persuasive: sustainability can provide potential value for market value, share price, risk reduction, marketing, sales, brand reputation, and even human resources. The report gives specific information about how and why that increase in value is possible.
Rochlin says that in order to create value for sustainability at a company, that company should pick two to three areas where they really want to make true change the idea is not to spread one’s self too thin. In the words of Niki King, Senior Manager for CSR at Campbell’s, who presented on the same panel at the conference, “you have to do some soul searching, to determine who you will be as a company.”
Project ROI provides a very helpful framework for making those core strategic initiatives a success. First, identify fit. This gets back to the concept of doing “soul searching” in order to identify core strategic initiatives that make sense for your particular business, not spreading ambitions too thinly, and being able to articulate the rationale as to why. Second, commit ”go big or go home” in this specific area. Has the CEO, with approval of the board, committed to being a leader in this area? For example, the CEO of Lockheed Martin, Marilyn A. Hewson, was able to demonstrate to shareholders that it was a risk for the future to not embed sustainability into the company, and that it’s intimately tied to research & development and innovation in a company.
Third, manage that initiative like you manage all other aspects of the  company: measure, monitor, and report. And finally, connect: involve and engage stakeholders. Those stakeholders may include employees of your company or shareholders and consumers. Listen to what they say and adjust your strategies accordingly.
King echoed the importance of stakeholder engagement; she conducted over a hundred internal and external interviews at Campbell’s. Asking what was most important to them gave her essential information about operations and perspectives so she could know how to get specific with sustainability implementation strategy. And she said that having data, like the fact that sustainability can grow business by 20%, is immensely helpful when you are trying to get internal buy-in from sales and marketing professionals.
 

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GreenBlue

In the Loop- Where will GreenBlue be in April

Spring has sprung in GreenBlue’s hometown of Charlottesville, Virginia (also the home of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello) and with the warmer weather comes a lot of exciting events for our staff members.
What We’re Hosting

  • April 11-13th – SustPack 2016. Co-hosted with Smithers Pira, SustPack will bring together over 400 delegates to tackle the most pressing sustainable packaging issues happening right now.
  • April 26th- Public Webinar: Outcomes of the 2016 Woodland Owner & Brand Owner Summit. Join GreenBlue and the American Forest Foundation for a roundup of the most important themes discussed at our recent forest summit. Hosted by Senior Manager of Forest Products, Tom Pollock.
  • April 29th- Public Webinar: Introduction to EPAT 3.0. Learn more about our newly launched Environmental Paper Assessment Tool. Senior Manager of Forest Products Tom Pollock will be presenting.

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Springtime in GreenBlue’s hometown of Charlottesville, Virginia, also the home of Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello.

Where We’ll Be

  • Sundays in April through December- Charlottesville City Market. GreenBlue will be running the city’s composting program for the second year in a row. GreenBlue staff members Anne Bedarf, Tesia Moore, and Charlotte Dreizen will be helping run our recycling and composting efforts.
  • April 6th- GreenBlue Sustainable Materials Director James Ewell will be presenting with iPoint during the webinar “What Does the Move to High Product Transparency Mean to Your Company?”
  • April 15th – GreenBlue and SPC Director Nina Goodrich will be speaking at the Tom Tom Founders Festival in Charlottesville, Va during the Environmental Entrepreneurs lunch.
  • April 20th – GreenBlue Senior Manager Anne Bedarf will be speaking at Dow’s Earth Day event as well as touring their plant in Freeport, Texas.
  • April 25-27 – GreenBlue and SPC Director Nina Goodrich will be speaking at ReFocus, the Recycling Summit & Expo in Orlando, Florida.
  • April 20th- The University of Virginia Earth Week Expo. Communications Coordinator Anne Elsea will be speaking with students about how they can become more sustainable.
  • April 27th- Project Manager Kelly Cramer will be attending Flexapalooza, a specialized training session in South Carolina.
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Member Spotlight Sustainable Packaging Coalition

Q&A with new SPC Executive Committee member Liza Blackwell

The SPC Executive Committee is an Advisory Committee to The Sustainable Packaging Coalition. The EC’s role is to provide advice, act as ambassadors for SPC/GreenBlue, and make recommendations on issues related to the SPC, including its goals, strategies, and projects.
We interviewed our three new Executive Committee members, Liza Blackwell (Nike), Kim Carswell (Target), and Chris Davidson (WestRock) to learn more about them and what they hope to accomplish while serving on the SPC Executive Committee

Elizabeth-BlackwellEC member name: Liza Blackwell
Title: Packaging Sustainability Manager
Company: Nike

Q: What are your hobbies?
I’m an outdoors person, which works out really well in the Pacific Northwest. I really love hiking, snowshoeing, camping, or just generally exploring the coast and canyons of Oregon. It’s a great place to get outside. I also enjoy volunteering with a few area animal rescue organizations. Outside of that, being new to home owning, I can be found, more often than I’d like, being mediocre at home repair.
Q: What are your favorite activities to do in Portland?
Portland is fantastic for its food and beer scene. You can hit a different restaurant every week, and never be disappointed. Additionally, there is no short supply of interesting places for vegetarians, which I appreciate. Portland also has a fantastic theater community. There are a lot of really great shows here done by smaller companies. You can see everything from gripping crime dramas, to outrageous parodies, to emotional coming of age stories, all with an audience of 30 people or less. It’s a fantastic town. It’s something to consider when we are planning for SPC Advance (in Portland, September 19-21, 2016).
Q: Since SPC Advance 2016 is going to be in Portland, what’s the one must-do if you come to Portland and you do nothing else?
Powell’s City of Books would have to top the list. If you do absolutely nothing else, go there. It’s an entire city block, three floors, and is a fantastic experience. If a drink and a movie is more your thing, the quirky and historical McMenamins properties are a-can’t miss. If you can only see one site, the Columbia Gorge would get my vote. The best part is that because Portland is so easy to navigate, you could hit all three in one day and still have time to catch a Timbers soccer match.
Q: Can you tell me a little about your role at Nike?
My title is Packaging Sustainability Manager. The responsibilities sound rather broad, and they are. My role is to review and advise the packaging used for any apparel, footwear, or equipment product. This includes any packaging used in transport, consumer-facing packaging, or packaging in a retail environment. I look for opportunities to make design changes, material-usage changes, or process advances that would reflect our commitment to sustainability. I oversee the content management and vendor compliance of our Packaging Restricted Substance List. This is a document that requires our packaging suppliers to remain compliant with Nike packing standards. I also assist with the strategy and facilitation with packaging waste reduction initiatives.

2000px-Logo_NIKE.svg 2Q: Nike was a found member of the SPC in 2004, over 10 years ago. What inspired Nike, and you, to get involved with the SPC?

We believe that no single organization can drive the system change we all desire. When we came to this realization more than a decade ago, we sought like-minded companies and people who were committed to the same goal. At the time we helped found the SPC, packaging was our single largest volume waste stream, and so stimulating industry collaboration to reduce waste, was a necessity. It’s still a necessity today but through the SPC we are making significant progress..
On a personal level, I want to be involved because I benefit by having meaningful discussions with others in our industry. And in my role as a Nike employee, I can bring that information and energy back to Nike and incorporate it into our standards and practices. Worldwide, conversations are happening that will affect the future of our planet. I feel we’re at a tipping point in our stewardship of the environment. And there is more urgency than ever for a responsible packaging industry to drive industry change.
Q: Following on to that, how did you first become interested in sustainability?
It goes back to the first question and answer of “what are my hobbies? I like to be outside.” It started for me before the term environmental sustainability was a thing. Professionally, I had been going in the direction of print production and packaging production, and being in packaging production was the first time that I felt like I could make a difference. I could make some choices in my job that directly reflected my personal values. For example, when I started with Nike as a packaging producer, one of the changes I was able to implement was moving all of our golf ball packaging to FSC certified paper. I thought, “This is fantastic. This is possible!” Obviously you’re doing it with support of others. But it was the first time I figured out that one person could actually make a difference. We struggle with that in daily society, where it’s often, “Yeah, I could recycle but really how much is that helping?” In the packaging industry, we know how much it is helping, but your average person, I think, may not understand just how much one person can help. So getting into the packaging industry was a revelation that I can personally make a difference. This is fantastic.
Q: What inspired you to run for the Executive Committee?
It’s important for Nike and me to be engaged with the industry, helping to move some of these important industry discussions forward from the front. An example is the biodegradability additives position paper the SPC just released. It’s a great example of an approach in which I’m really interested. I think it’s really important that the industry is making these larger statements about what works in reality for the environment and what doesn’t to both help inform business and the consumer. The opportunity to lead from the front is something I certainly didn’t want to miss.
Q: You mentioned the position paper on biodegradability additives. What other initiatives within the SPC are you involved with or planning to get involved with, and what would you like to achieve during your time on the EC?
Right now the one I’m most excited about are the SPC meetings, especially SPC Advance 2016 comes back to Portland. I’m certainly planning on being involved in that! I’m also excited about the educational opportunities that the SPC is providing. A big focus for me will be pulling groups into the SPC who are there as members but are not as engaged as they could be, and of course I’ll be focused on new membership. It’s so important that groups like the SPC can act as an industry driver and as a place where we who come from different industries and different brands can make effective decisions. Whether it’s around chemical or material use, or process and design development, we can all learn from each other. The thing I’m most excited about SPC is the chance to bring industry together to make meaningful progress toward our goals..
Specifically, I’d like to take a good look at how SPC members could use packaging as a potential material source, and how we encourage other organizations to – either on their own or through partnerships – to look at packaging as a potential material source. How can we set up processes that can be duplicated across the industry? And how do we grow the SPC. Involvement and collaboration are key to moving the entire industry forward?

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Member Spotlight Sustainable Packaging Coalition

Survey shows SPC members’ advanced approach to sustainable packaging

The results of a recent survey jointly conducted by the SPC and Packaging Digest show significant differences between SPC members’ and non-members’ approach to sustainable packaging. Compared to the broader collection of industry respondents, SPC members indicated a significantly higher level of understanding of and engagement with sustainable packaging opportunities.
One of the most pronounced differences demonstrated was in respondents’ understanding of the “circular economy” concept and its integration into their companies’ strategies. Non-member respondents were split about half-and-half on their familiarity with the phrase. SPC members, however, were overwhelmingly familiar with the concept – 83% said they were familiar with the phrase and understood what it meant. When asked if the circular economy factored into their companies’ sustainable packaging strategy, 74% of SPC members said yes. Of non-members, only 46% indicated that their company’s strategy was reflective of circular economy thinking. This suggests that SPC excels at staying on the forefront of sustainability thinking.
Perhaps most impressive, SPC members demonstrated superior understanding of the actions needed to realize a more circular economy. Improving recyclability of packaging was shown to be a common goal of all companies regardless of SPC membership status, but SPC members distinguished themselves with the frequency with which they mentioned using post-consumer recycled content (PCR), showing that they embrace not just the “push” but also the “pull” needed to drive recycling. Somewhat surprisingly, increasing PCR usage was the number one most mentioned goal of SPC companies. For non-member respondents, this sank to fourth. SPC members also showed that increasing recycling (and increasing the availability of PCR) requires more than simply putting recyclable packaging in the marketplace. SPC members listed “increasing consumer participation in recycling” as the fourth most prevalent company goal related to sustainable packaging. For non-members, it ranked eleventh.
Circular economy drawing 72 dpi
Although the biggest tenet of circular economy thinking centers on making those connections between end-of-life and beginning-of-life, SPC members indicated that they are far more focused on the full packaging life cycle compared to their non-member counterparts. When asked if their companies focus more on improving end-of-life issues or addressing impacts throughout the life cycle, the number of SPC members who indicated a full life cycle approach was double the number who indicated a primary focus on end-of-life. Of the non-member respondents, those numbers were roughly equal, with respondents split between focusing on the full life cycle versus end-of-life only. This type of thinking was reflected in SPC member companies’ measurements as well, with SPC members responding with much more frequency that they measure life cycle impacts such as greenhouse gas emissions (5 ranks higher than non-members’ indicated company measurements), water quality impacts (4 ranks higher), and water consumption (3 ranks higher).
Why are SPC members outperforming their peers in addressing sustainable packaging? It’s likely that the answer is complex, and while we hope a portion of the credit belongs to the positive impacts of our SPC initiatives and projects, we suspect that a portion of the credit is due to the virtue of having so many leadership companies in the coalition. The survey results suggested one particularly interesting idea: non-member respondents indicated that marketing professionals exert the most influence over sustainable packaging decisions in their companies, while SPC members indicated that R&D professionals were the biggest influencers. In our view, this reinforces the value of the SPC in encouraging innovation and science to back sustainability advancements.

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GreenBlue Sustainable Packaging Coalition

In the Loop — Nina talks plastics recycling & packaging sustainability

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Nina Goodrich of the Sustainable Packaging Coalition and Joe Pickard of ISRI. Photo courtesy of Recycling Today

Over the past two weeks, GreenBlue and SPC Director Nina Goodrich has been flying across the U.S. to speak at two major industry conferences. First was the 2016 Plastics Recycling conference hosted by Resource Recycling in New Orleans, Feb. 1-3. Nina moderated the session “The Economic Upside of Recycling” with speakers Keefe Harrison (The Recycling Partnership), Joe Pickard (Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries), Tim Buwalda (Reclay StewardEdge), and Paul Yang (Mother Parkers).
The session focused on the opportunities that the sustainability community has in the current challenging recycling market.
During the session, Nina also introduced our newest initiative ReStart the Cycle, a coordinated effort to increase the recycling of valuable materials. While materials like PET and HDPE are recyclable in over 60% of communities and very valuable to MRFs, there is still a large amount of these materials that don’t make it to MRFs.  ReStart the Cycle will encourage the use of the How2Recycle label on packaging that are of high value in the packaging value chain.
Read the full Recycling Today coverage of Nina’s Plastics Recycling session.
Nina Plastics recycling quote
Photo Courtesy of Resource Recycling

At the Packaging Conference on February 8-10 in Las Vegas, Nina explored the State of Sustainable Packaging in 2016. Key challenges discussed include: The price of oil and the effect on the economic viability of recycling, the global resin surplus and the China green fence. Opportunities include the increasing acceptance of the circular economy, COP21 and EPA’s food waste reduction goals.
In her talk, Nina also touched on the current Sustainable Packaging Coalition initiatives including an exciting project that is set to be unveiled later this year. The Goals Project has examined over 150 companies’ goals as they relate to sustainability issues and will be analyzing the trends that can be seen among these Fortune 500 companies.
Follow @GreenBlueOrg or join our mailing list for the latest news and updates about GreenBlue and the SPC.
 

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GreenBlue Sustainable Packaging Coalition

Debate on Bag Bans is Centerpiece for Hot Button Topics Addressed at SPC Advance

Sustainable Packaging Coalition annual conference encourages dialogue and collaboration among leading brands, government agencies, and NGOs

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Brad Rodgers from PepsiCo poses with leading opponent and proponent of bag bans, Marcus Erisken from 5 Gyres (center) and Phil Rozenski from NOVOLEX (right) Photo by Holly Elmore, of Elemental Impact

 
The Sustainable Packaging Coalition’s members-only conference, SPC Advance, provided a forum for industry to engage in dialogue and education on a number of important issues affecting packaging sustainability, punctuated by a lively debate on legislation banning plastic shopping bags.
Nearly 200 attendees from every major stakeholder group convened in Charlotte, NC to address topics including Federal Trade Commission compliance, Extended Producer Responsibility, and the recent wave of local and regional regulatory requirements for foodservice packaging.
The debate on bag bans provided the highlight of the conference, with Marcus Eriksen from 5 Gyres providing a compelling set of arguments to support the environmental rationale for banning plastic shopping bags and Phil Rozenski from NOVOLEX delivering a counterpoint with an equally convincing presentation to persuade the audience that plastic bags have their place in a sustainable materials economy. After both presenters delivered their arguments, a robust Q&A and discussion revealed that common ground exists between environmental activists and the packaging industry: the SPC’s How2Recycle labeling system, which both parties agree facilitates and encourages consumer recycling behaviors. The conference provided a forum for many contentious issues facing the packaging industry, but the collaborative atmosphere fostered more discovery of common ground than widening of divides.
The program at SPC Advance was not restricted to controversial issues, however, and attendees were offered numerous opportunities to engage in collective work to move the needle on today’s opportunities in sustainable packaging including recovery of hard-to-recycle plastics, the role of packaging in the recently popularized concept of the Circular Economy, and the sustainability considerations for pharmaceutical packaging. Attendees heard from several leading business thinkers, highlighted by an energizing keynote presentation from Domtar CEO John Williams, who reminded the audience that “You should tell your own sustainability story in your own authentic way to the audiences that you care most about.”
Networking and education remained a mainstay at SPC Advance 2016, and attendees found ample opportunities to make new connections and reflect on the content of the program at activities including a catered rooftop pool reception, a pub crawl through downtown Charlotte, and tours of material recovery facilities and fiber-producing woodlands. By the end of the conference, SPC Advance attendees were left with new connections, new ideas, and a deep appreciation for the confluence of environmental activism, voluntary industry initiatives, governmental regulation, and the future of sustainable packaging.
 
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GreenBlue Sustainable Packaging Coalition

Sustainable Packaging Coalition says goodbye to 3 Executive Committee Members

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Victor Bell, Steve Mahler, and Brad Rogers are finishing their three-year term on the SPC Executive Committee

 
Every fall, the SPC holds elections for the distinguished Executive Committee. The nine elected committee members join one GreenBlue representative and serve as advisors to GreenBlue’s Sustainable Packaging Coalition for three year terms. In their advisory capacity, the Executive Committee provides strategic and fiscal guidances on meetings, events, projects, and all other aspects of the Coalition. The three Executive Committee members who are ending their term this year are Brad Rodgers, Victor Bell, and Steve Mahler. All three have shown dedication to advancing sustainable packaging and have contributed countless hours and an incredible amount of their expertise to the Sustainable Packaging Coalition. Before we welcome three new Executive Committee members, we want to give thanks to Victor, Steve, and Brad for their dedication to the SPC over their term.

Victor Bell

Environmental Packaging International

President
Victor has been a supportive member of the SPC since the very beginning of the Coalition, and has brought his deep institutional knowledge of the SPC to EC discussions. Over the past three years he has played a valuable role in SPC events by shaping conference agendas and moderating panels, and continues to support the adoption and use of the SPC’s COMPASS life cycle assessment tool. His support and passion for the SPC are undeniable, and he’s been an outgoing ambassador for the SPC over the years and has been responsible for recruiting a number of great new members.

Steve Mahler

Caraustar Industries Inc.

Design Manager
During his time on the Executive Committee, Steve has been a strong voice representing packaging converters in the membership. He spearheaded the Consumer Education and Outreach Industry Leadership Committee’s work on a fun and innovative student video challenge on orange juice packaging. However, most of us will remember him as the creator and champion of the “Trashies” packaging awards. Steve’s goal was to bring the packaging community together for a fun event to recognize that exceptional people, partnerships, public awareness work, and processes are necessary to achieve sustainable packaging. We think he succeeded and can’t wait to see him emcee the next Trashies at SustPack 2016 in Chicago!

Brad Rodgers

Pepsico

Director of Sustainable Packaging, Advanced Materials Research
As an EC member, Brad has been an outgoing and generous resource for the members, willingly sharing his knowledge and time. Brad served on the organizing committee for SustPack 2015 and has generously supported the SPC’s work by sponsoring Coalition events. His support of the Essentials of Sustainable Packaging course, the Biopolymers Working Group, and the Multi-Laminate Flexible Recovery Industry Leadership Committee has been instrumental to the ongoing success of the initiatives. As he rolls off the Executive Committee, Brad will continue to serve in a leadership role on the SPC Brand Council, recently established to discuss how brand owners can lead the broader sustainable packaging agenda.