TricorBraun WinePak Zero Waste Program Costs Zero


In First Year, Company Recycles More Than 1000 Tons Of Waste



St. Louis, Mo…TricorBraun WinePak has launched a successful zero-waste program which has incurred no expense and has redirected 1020.91 tons of waste to recyclers, according to Jad Darsey, TricorBraun’s director of sustainability and plastics.



TricorBraun WinePak (www.tricorbraunwinepak.com) is a $120 million division of TricorBraun that specifically services the wine industry. It is the largest supplier of wine packaging in North America.



In March 2012, the company launched a four point program to systematically eliminate waste. The four points were based on its four streams: corrugated, plastic, pallets and waste glass. The strategy is to match the right recycler with the company’s needs. The program was headed by Ernesto Olivares, TricorBraun WinePak’s distribution manager.



A solid market for waste-corrugated exists, and Mr. Olivares identified a recycler with that area of specialization. The recycler provided a bailer and hauling at no cost in trade for the company’s waste-corrugated. Mr. Darsey reports during the first year of the program 429.94 tons of waste-corrugated were recycled.



Waste plastics - including pallet wrap, plastic strapping and PET - are placed in totes that are provided without charge by a recycler and are strategically placed around the distribution center. This alliance between the company and its recycler kept 17.51 tons of waste out of landfills, according to Mr. Darsey.



Waste glass is a valuable commodity. Between 95 and 98 percent of the company’s broken glass is recycled. TricorBraun WinePak has provided glass manufacturers with 573.46 tons of broken glass destined to become new bottles and jars.



The biggest challenge was recycling low impact shipping pallets utilized by some suppliers. Unlike traditional pallets, which are made from hardwoods and are readily recyclable, these pallets are made from pressboard and plywood. They are not typically recyclable. However, Mr. Olivares struck a deal with a local company that collects these types of products and resells them as a fuel source to the operator of a California incinerator. “Since the program’s inception, 2119 pallets that would have been destined for the landfill provide energy back to the California market place,” Mr. Darsey said



Mr. Olivares emphasizes, “Your staff has to believe in the program. A busy or tired employee may need to take a couple of extra steps to recycle an item and it needs to be done properly every time.”



TricorBaun WinePak has offices in Northern and Southern California, Oregon, Washington and British Columbia. It has been serving the wine industry since 1982.



The company’s facilities include a $2 million repacking system that automatically transfers wine bottles from eight-foot high stacks of pallets to individual wineries’ custom, 12-bottle cartons.



It also offers an online store, WinePak Direct (www.WinePakDirect.com) that serves small wineries and large wineries with exclusive, limited case bottlings.



TricorBraun (www.TricorBraun.com) is one of North America’s largest providers of bottles, jars, and other rigid packaging components.



Michael L. Drohlich

Drohlich Associates, Inc.

314-567-4030 Office

314-878-6246 Home

mdrohlich@drohlich.com  

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