Showing posts with label Industrial News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Industrial News. Show all posts

Palmolive washing-up liquid

Design agency Tin Horse has redesigned the packaging for Colgate Palmolive's range of washing-up liquids, creating a series of ergonomic packs.

Following a briefing from Colgate’s New York-based global design team, Tin Horse worked closely with the FMCG giant on all stages of the design process – from the conceptual stage, through to pack development, research and final design.

Tin Horse said that it has created a packaging concept that resonates with consumers on an "emotional" level across the globe.

The agency created a design that would work across a variety of pack sizes, with ergonomics to make them comfortable in the hands of consumers. The packs feature a newly-design closure that blends into the shape of the bottle, to create an uninterrupted silhouette.

Saudi joint venture company to manufacture ‘flexible’ products.

JEDDAH – Delaware, Ohio - based Greif Inc. said in a statement that it is forming a joint venture with a Saudi Arabian company to handle the production of “flexible” industrial packaging.

Greif said the joint venture will include a business that makes a type of container called “flexible intermediate bulk containers,” otherwise known as “big bags.”

Greif, through a subsidiary, has agreed to form a flexible products joint venture (JV) with National Scientific Company Limited (NSC), a subsidiary of Dabbagh Group Holding Co. Dabbagh is a leading privately held Middle East business group headquartered in Saudi Arabia. Greif will manage the JV, 50 percent of which will be owned by National Scientific, and 50 percent by Greif’s subsidiary.

The venture includes the flexible products business of Storsack, which was recently acquired by Greif. Storsack is the world’s largest producer of flexible intermediate bulk containers (FIBCs), with 3,000 employees and 16 production facilities worldwide.

The joint venture will be completed after certain conditions are satisfied, including any necessary merger and regulatory approvals.

“This joint venture extends our core rigid industrial packaging business,” said Michael J. Gasser, Greif chairman and chief executive officer. “By joining forces with NSC and the Dabbagh Group, which has an established reputation as a trusted partner and pioneer of business within the Middle East and internationally, the JV will benefit from upstream advantages in the flexible products business.

LyondellBasell adds HDPE caps and closure capacity

Polyolefins giant LyondellBasell says that the caps and closures market will be one of the key focus sectors for its new Hostalen ACP HDPE production unit, currently under construction at its Münchsmünster site in Germany.

The 250,000tpa unit will begin manufacturing multi-modal HDPE resin grades using LyondellBasell’s Advanced Cascade Process (ACP), for the closure, pipe and blow moulding industry in the second half of this year.

The ACP process is claimed to allow production of HDPE resins with tailor-made molecular weight distributions and co-monomer content, resulting in optimum stiffness/toughness balance, high ESCR and improved ease of processing.

“This state-of-the-art plant will bring additional capacity to the market and improve customer’s flexibility of supply within the EU,” the company said in a statement.

Pack offers packaging line, material efficiencies

Administration approval in October 2008, Pfizer launched its overactive bladder (OAB) treatment Toviaz™ in a carded blister housed in a paperboard outer sleeve and bundled with regulatory literature for presentation to consumers by prescribing physicians.

Last year, Pfizer worked with AmerisourceBergen company Anderson Packaging to transition to Anderson’s proprietary IntuiDose™ child-resistant compliance-prompting format for the physician’s sample package. The four-panel wallet pack contains 14 8-mg doses. The user pushes each pill out of each blister cavity from a three-ply cold-formed base film. The lidding is a 15#, paper-supported, push-through 0.008 foil. The pack uses a 16-pt board stock, coated on two sides (C2S), with a heat-seal coating applied on press during printing to help reduce overall cost and material use. Also, there are 4-mg and 8-mg strength versions, distinguished by an orange or green color scheme.

The Toviaz pack recently was honored as the 2009 Compliance Package of the Year by the Healthcare Compliance Packaging Council, and as the first Distribution Management Award-winner by the Healthcare Distribution Management Assn.

EU demand for stand-up pouches to grow 9.1%

The advantages of (SUP) packaging, such as as light weight and excellent oxygen barrier properties, will drive the European market to grow 9.1% over the next five years, according to PCI Films Consulting.

In the study ‘The European Market for Stand-Up Pouches 2010’, PCI says demand grew by 10-15% during the five years up to 2008. Demand dipped during the economic recession of 2009 but strong demand is expected to return over the next few years.

In 2009, nearly 19 billion SUPs were supplied in Europe, accounting for 5% of the total value of converted flexible packaging in Europe. This figure is predicted to rise to over 30 billion units by 2014.

“In recent years, attitudes towards the SUP have become much more positive as brand owners, retailers and consumers recognise the attractions of this format as a cost-effective, convenient and environmentally superior alternative to rigid packaging,” says report author Paul Gastor.

China Flexible Packaging's Q2 profit rises 89%

SINGAPORE : Mainboard-listed film manufacturer China Flexible Packaging Holdings said its second quarter net profit jumped 89 per cent on-year to 13.8 million yuan, or S$2.8 million.

The company said the better results were due to the increase in sales and gross profit margin for the period under review.

China Flexible Packaging saw its revenue rise 41 per cent to 235 million yuan, driven by increased market demand for its products.

The company also said the positive results were due to the recovery of the food and beverage industry and consumer spending in China.

Meanwhile, the company's net profit for the first half of its financial year nearly tripled, rising 195 per cent, to 38.6 million yuan on higher sales volume.

PlasticsEurope condemns German BPA precautions

Industry trade association PlasticsEurope has hit out at a report published earlier this month by the German Federal Ministry for the Environment (Umweltbundesamt) which recommends that producers and users of bisphenol-A (BPA) adopt alternatives as a precautionary measure.

The Umweltbundesamt report, ‘Bisphenol A: a chemical with adverse effects produced in large quantities’, was published on 9 June. According to PlasticsEurope, its recommendation that BPA producers and users switch to alternatives is a misinterpretation of the EU’s precautionary principle.

“The UBA [Umweltbundesamt] has correctly reported that leading international and national authorities regard the use of BPA-based materials as safe,” PlasticsEurope said in a statement released last week.

“The precautionary principle should only be applied if the insecurities in the assessment of a risk are large, for example, when scientific data is either unavailable or insufficient. However, BPA has an extensive scientific data base available, and experts can assess any risk associated with BPA comparably well.”

Toy packaging and recycling

The toy industry faces a crackdown on excessive packaging under plans to reduce the amount of rubbish sent to landfills, the new Environment Secretary has warned.

Parents who complain that new toys are wrapped in too much plastic and cardboard may have found an ally in Caroline Spelman, who announced the move during her first interview in her new role.

She plans to extend the voluntary Courtauld Commitment on grocery packaging to toys and other sectors of the leisure and entertainment industries. Mrs Spelman will today announce a review of waste disposal, with the aim of raising the level of household rubbish put out for recycling in the UK, which at 18 per cent is one of the lowest in Europe.

Expressing her irritation at the amount of packaging that forms much of household waste, the Cabinet minister, who has three children, told The Independent: "I'm a working mum who has to cook supper and it frustrates me that so much of what I purchase to feed the family is double- or treble-wrapped, quite often in tough plastic, and you do slice your finger trying to get into it.

Reduce packaging technologies

Although packaging waste accounts for around 15% of the total waste burden in developed countries, its disposal has become a significant and pressing problem because it tends to be high-volume and highly visible. As consumers continue to demand convenience, freshness and quality in their food and drinks purchases, retailers are prioritizing getting products onto store shelves as rapidly and efficiently as possible.

However, as packaging waste grows, retailers are coming under pressure from consumers, governments and lobby groups to take action in order to reduce the amount of packaging used on products.

A new report by CompaniesandMarkets.com evaluates innovation in packaging reduction in food and drinks by region and product category, pinpointing growth opportunities and highlighting technologies with the strongest future potential. It examines packaging waste issues from various stakeholders in the supply chain: packaging suppliers, food and drinks manufacturers, retailers and consumers.

Market value of microwave packaging.

Having witnessed deceleration in its growth over the last few years, the US market for microwave packaging is expected to reach US$2.52 billion by 2015. Growth in the short to medium term period will be driven by factors such as the trend towards take-home and packaged convenient frozen foods, increasing popularity of microwaveable foods and innovation in product offerings.

Consumers’ desire for food solutions, which are quick, efficient, time saving, and designed to simplify an elaborate food preparation, has been long driving technology developments in consumer electronics geared towards delivering the utmost level of convenience.

Microwave ovens, which during 1970s, invited lot of skepticism from wary skepticism by wary consumers unwilling to sacrifice quality, flavor or taste of foods, is today an indispensable part of every American household. The massive levels of market penetration witnessed for this consumer appliance, over the years, is the result of continued incremental improvements made in microwave technology. Against this backdrop, microwave packaging too has developed into a highly accepted and convenient packaging technology.

Thermoformed paper Material for lunch meat packs

Marks & Spencer is the first to commercialize a paper-based material that can be thermoformed on existing packaging lines.
UK retailer Marks & Spencer, an avid innovator where sustainable packaging practices are concerned, has launched sliced luncheon meat in thermoformed packs made of Paperlite. Developed jointly by Marks & Spencer, Billerud, and Flextrus, Paperlite is said to be environmentally beneficial because it’s made from a renewable resource as opposed to being entirely petroleum-based and because its manufacturing is FSC-certified (Forest Stewardship Council).

At the base of the Paperlite material is paper produced by Billerud in such a way that it is inherently stretchable. This material is sent to Flextrus for a coextrusion coating of PE/EVOH/PE. The EVOH provides the oxygen barrier properties needed for the modified-atmosphere package. In a second pass, Flextrus flexo prints the material black, which is done for aesthetic reasons.

Packaging equipment safety tips

Machine builders and Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEMs) are being challenged to incorporate additional automation and/or motion into their machinery to address the flexibility demands of the packaging industry. These flexibility demands can create complex safety issues into the packaging machinery, but rest assured, there are solutions out there that unite flexibility and ensure the safety of machine operators.

Shorter innovation cycles and increased pressure from the competition is driving the need for more flexible packaging machines. This demand has resulted in the decrease of batch build and multi pack runs and now requires your machinery to produce multiple packaging variations from the same machine. This flexibility must include the ability to perform quick product changeovers while maintaining a high level of throughput efficiency.

Croatian beverage crate moulder Kaplast up for sale

The owners of Croatian beverage crate moulder Kaplast have put the firm up for sale in a bid to broaden its cyclical business base and allow it to enter new markets across Europe.
Its controlling shareholder, the Feitl family, is inviting offers to purchase a minority or majority stake of up to 79% in the Vojnić-based company. But potential bidders will have to move fast if they want to beat the 2 June deadline to submit an initial letter of intent.

Currently, Kaplast’s single moulding plant supplies 73% of an estimated 22 million crates consumed by its regional market, comprising the states of the former Yugoslavia including Slovenia, Serbia, Kosovo, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

The firm operates a modern, automated injection moulding shop, equipped with 12 presses ranging in clamping force from 35 to 950 tons. At present, Kaplast is the only local in-mould labelling (IML) and overmoulding crate producer, according to the Croatian branch of accountancy group Deloitte which is handling the sale.

The current management has continued to invest in the firm with the greater part of the plant moulding equipment installed between 2004 and 2009, stated Deloitte.

The Feitl family, which holds a stake of just over 73% in Kaplast, aims through the sale to expand the company’s customer base and/or product range to make it less cyclical. “The main goal of management is finding a partner which would enable the company to participate in the wider European market,” explained Deloitte senior associate Uros Kalinić.

Kaplast has already attracted interest from potential foreign bidders ready to enter the due diligence stage of the sale process, Kalinic added.

Despite its cyclical business, the Croatian moulder achieved average annual sales of around Euro 8 million over the past five years with average profit margins of 13%, according to Deloitte.

At one time, Kaplast was considering establishing a new plant to mould quality beverage crates with a local partner in China, but the management has since shelved the idea. But it is understood it could be revived at a later stage.

Kaplast is part owned by its workforce with the employees owning a shareholding of more than 20%. The Italian company General Plast holds a further 6.7% stake

Packaging automation: Efficient bottle handling

An automated intermediate bottle storage system at the Alpla plant in the U.K. uses robots to load plastic bottles from the blow molders into trays and also moves the stacks of trays automatically into and out of the storage area.

Alpla is a worldwide plastic bottle manufacturer with 122 production plants. At one of its plants in the U.K., it recently installed a distinctive system for handling and storing plastic bottles that changes the traditional method of storing empty plastic (PET, HDPE, PP, etc.) and aluminum containers for future downstream processing.

Supplied by Autefa automation Gmbh, the system, which is called an intermediate bottle storage system (iBSS), is ideally suited for onsite or through the wall installations where bottle production and filling are done on the same site. In the traditional method of bottle handling, most onsite operations produce and bulk palletize the bottles or pack the bottles in plastic bags and temporarily store the pallets or bags in an onsite warehouse. the pallets or bags of empty bottles are then retrieved from the warehouse on demand, and the empty bottles are depalletized or debagged and sent through the wall to downstream operations.

This traditional method of operation requires significant money to be spent for packaging supplies, labor and capital equipment. Dunnage is required for pallets, tier sheets, top frames, stretch wrapping and/or strapping and labeling. Labor is needed to transport pallets or bags to interim storage, and then retrieve them for downstream processing.

Once they are retrieved for downstream processing, labor is needed to manually remove stretch wrap, straps or bags. Capital equipment is necessary to depalletize the bottles onto accumulation conveyors or, in some cases, the containers are dumped into bins, and are then unscrambled and placed onto accumulation conveyors.

IBSS automates bottle handling

The Autefa iBSS drastically changes that above mode of operation with the primary intent of reducing costs for both the bottle producer and the filler. "We were looking for a bottle handling and storage system that would reduce our labor and material costs," says Martin Stark, Alpla's engineering director. "After examining the systems that were available, we decided that Autefa would best meet our needs."

The iBSS is placed between the blow-mold area and the filling area with lanes of tabletop conveyor transporting the bottles. if bottles are intended to go directly to the filling lines, they bypass the iBSS and go directly to the lines. If bottles are to be placed into interim storage, they are picked by Autefa tray loading/unloading robots and placed into metal trays.

These filled trays are stacked vertically, and are then automatically placed into a storage system sized to meet the customer's inventory requirements. When the bottles are needed for downstream processing, the stacks of trays are automatically retrieved and returned to the tray loading/unloading robot systems, where each tray is unloaded and the bottles placed back onto the tabletop conveyor for delivery to the filling lines.

In this operation, bottles are delivered to the iBSS on a series of tabletop conveyors that run parallel to the tray loading/unloading robots. Sensors monitor the flow of bottles and start and stop the conveyors to maintain consistent bottle flow. In the loading/unloading area, a two-axis, pick-and-place robot with custom gripper heads picks up a number of bottles and places them in a stainless steel storage tray. The robot can have one to four gripper heads and will pick up bottles from the corresponding number of parallel conveyors.

40,000 bottles/hr

When a tray is full, it is transferred to the full-tray stack, and the next empty tray is placed for loading. Capacity of a single-robot system depends on the sizes of bottles being handled and the number of grippers installed, but it can go as high as 40,000 bottles/hr for a four-gripper system.

Empty trays are delivered to the loading/unloading area in stacks typically about 15 trays high and the trays are placed in the loading zone one at a time. To accomplish this, the entire stack is raised and the bottom tray is conveyed into the loading zone.

Once the tray is filled, the process is reversed, and the full tray is conveyed onto the full-tray stack. As with the empty trays, this is accomplished by raising the entire stack and conveying the tray into the bottom position. The stack is then lowered onto the bottom tray.

There is no weight placed on the containers inside the trays because each tray is self supported, and the bottles are kept controlled and fixed at all times. The tray stack also has a specially designed top tray that serves as a dust seal. Each tray is identified by a permanently affixed the stacks of empty and filled trays are transported to and from storage by SAT-Carriages that run on a floor-mounted rail system.

When a SAT-Carriage carrying a stack of full trays reaches the assigned storage lane, the stack is lifted slightly and placed on a carriage that carries it into the lane. The procedure is reversed to deliver stacks of bottles back to the loading/unloading robots.

The iBSS incorporates a computerized data management system that controls the data base of stored bottles and trays. Should a bottle quality problem occur, the system can identify, locate and isolate the particular trays or trays of the suspect bottles.

These trays can then be automatically retrieved and staged in a defined area for examination. A customized listing of reports can also be generated to highlight inventory levels, identify segregated quality lots, determine available space left in storage, etc.

System advantages

"Autefa has been a great help throughout the project," says Stark. "They were present for installation and startup, and still provide assistance if we have any problems." The primary goal of the iBSS is cost reduction with a secondary goal of improved quality control.

Savings can be realized in the following categories:

Dunnage: no bags, pallets, tier sheets, top frames, strapping, stretch wrapping or labeling is required.

Capital equipment: the iBBS automatically balances the capacity differences between the blow molders and the fillers so smaller blow molders operating 24 hours, seven days a week can produce enough bottles for filling lines running 12 hours, six days a week. no baggers, debaggers, depalletizers, unscramblers, bins, strappers, stretch wrappers, labelers and fork trucks are required. A capital investment is necessary to purchase the iBSS, but this is a one-time cost and typically has a two to three year payback.

Labor: the iBSS does not require a designated, full-time operator. typically, an existing operator in an area close to the iBSS is assigned to oversee the system should an alarm condition require operator intervention. Typically, the iBSS requires approximately 80 percent less labor compared to a production plant with a traditional bagging/debagging installation.

Quality: there is no damage to the bottle body nor neck. Suspect bottles or production lots can be identified, segregated and controlled, thus preventing sub-quality production from being shipped.

Flexibility: the system provides total flexibility between the blow molders and the filling lines. Any blow molder's production can be diverted to any filling line on short notice.

Perspective: the system is designed to gently handle the containers without causing any storage damage to the container such as scratches or dents.

With the need to reduce bottle weight for further cost reduction, the iBSS is well suited to handle the demands of the future market. "The Autefa system has worked out very well for us," says Stark. "it has really exceeded our expectations. On top of everything else, it has eliminated the bags that we used to store our bottles in, so we don't have the costs of the bags or the environmental concerns."
More information is available:

Autefa Automation - U.S., part of Autefa automation
Gmbh, 843/667-3405. http://www.autefa.de/


ProAseptic Technologies installs pouch packaging technology

Spanish-based soft packaging machinery manufacturer ProAseptic Technologies has installed a pouch packaging technology for Elle & Vire, a French dairy manufacturer.


Elle & Vire are using the ProAseptic Pro-A2 machinery to create UHT dairy drink products in stand up re-sealable pouches. The machine will be used to sterilise, form, fill and seal the drinks into the pouches. It can handle two pouches per cycle at a speed of up to 6,000 pouches/hour. The Pro-A2 is interchangeable enabling Elle & Vire also use the machine for their UHT cream product range.

Also, the aseptically filled drinks will have a 180-day shelf life while stored at an ambient temperature.

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