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2. Agenda. What is Project LIFE?Why should I participate?How much will it cost?How does it work?What Resources are available?Next StepsGrand Rapids Label ExperienceQ
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1. 1 Project LIFETag & Label Manufacturers Institute November 17, 2008
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3. 3 What is Project LIFE? Certification program developed by TLMI to:
Support member response to growing pressures in the marketplace about environmental performance
Create incentives for improving environmental performance in the industry
Encourage continual improvement through cost-effective tools that enable custom prioritization
4. 4 This is a Member Driven Initiative Task Force Members:
Thomas Dahbura Hub Label
Calvin Frost Channeled Resources (ex-officio)
Tim Goodwin Resource Label
Jack Kenny L&NW (ex-officio)
Doug Kopp Kopco Graphics
John McDermott Label World, (Chair)
Mark Miles G-3 Enterprises
Bill Muir Grand Rapids Label Co.
Terie Syme Prestige Label
Nick Van Alstine Macaran Printed Products
Jeff Salisbury Label Impressions
Five Winds International (Project Consultants)
5. 5 Why should I participate? Customer Relations:
Anticipate and be ahead of requests
Marketing:
Differentiation will turn into Compliance
Good Management:
“What you can measure you can manage”
Identify cost savings and innovation opportunities
Empower employees
6. 6 Why Should I Participate? Tailored to label converters and their issues
Emphasis on matrix and liner waste and label design issues
General enough to cover entire business operation and diverse technologies
Easy to participate in
Simple process to follow and grow into
Flexible reporting and valuation
Proceed at the pace that makes sense for your business
Affordable
No special fees to support program overheads
Pay only for direct audit costs and investments in your business
7. 7 How do I communicate about LIFE? Certification is for your company/facility, not your product
Certified members can use the logo on marketing materials, but not the product package
Guidelines exist for claims and use of the logo
8. 8 How Much Will This Cost Me? TLMI annual fees cover…
Project LIFE development and maintenance
Website access and maintenance
Project LIFE marketing costs
Participant pays for
Cost of self-assessment
Cost of improvements
Cost of audit every other year
Cost of marketing their individual certification
Self-Assessment: Time commitments will vary based on availability and quality of existing activities and information
On-site Audit: Cost will be determined by time required by auditor to review documentation (on average 1-2 days)
9. 9 Estimated Audit Costs
10. 10 How Do I Participate?
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12. 12 More on the Scorecard Scorecard organized in 4 categories with 31 total metrics:
1.0 Clean production techniques
2.0 Energy and greenhouse gases
3.0 Product design
4.0 Management practices
The scorecard has several metrics particular to label converters (e.g. liner waste) but most are generic to most businesses and informed by ISO 14001
Each metric is scored by:
Not applicable
No activity
Investigating
Engaged
Public reporting
Improvement from previous year
There is no overall “Score” for the scorecard as different stakeholders will emphasize different metrics
Participants are encouraged to share the total scorecard with employees, customers and other important stakeholders.
13. 13 How does it work? Certification Decision Should I Become Certified?
I have met all of the criteria required for certification (see below).
Must have scored a minimum of ‘Engaged’ for all requirements in the Management section
Must have a score of and supporting documents for at least the level of ‘Investigating’ for all requirements, with explanation for any that are considered not applicable
Must demonstrate a process for how priorities will be or were determined for creating formal programs
Must demonstrate that the facility has incurred no significant environmental violations
Certification would allow me to more easily communicate my environmental commitments to my customers or local regulatory bodies, or my customers have actively been asking about Project LIFE Certification.
My company would like to take a leadership position on this issue.
If you do not check any of the above, use the Reference Manual and other resources to further develop your engagement with environmental activities, and consider certification again in the future.
14. 14 Getting Started at www.tlmi.com
15. 15 Resources Available LIFE Reference Manual and Guidelines for Use of Logo
TLMI Member Site: Green Guide
TLMI Environmental Best Practices Task Force
Local Dept of Environmental Quality
EPA Printer Sector Notebook
16. 16 Resources Available – Reference Manual 1.1.1 To decrease facility VOC and HAP releases to the air:
When printing, use low-VOC inks such as vegetable oil-based or water-based inks, or UV inks (rather than solvent-based inks), coatings, including varnishes and primers, and cleaning products.
When adhesive coating, use low-VOC adhesives such as water-soluble, hot-melt, or UV adhesives. Note that UV materials require additional safety protection.
Use automatic cleaning equipment for parts washers and other equipment. This equipment can often be retrofitted to existing presses and operations.
Use low-VOC alternatives to materials listed below.
17. 17 Next Steps
For further questions contact:
John McDermott
Environmental Best Practices Task Force
JohnM@labelworldusa.com
585-235-0200, X104
Frank Sablone
TLMI
fas@tlmi.com
630-357-9222