Tramontina may not be a name that immediately
resonates in the sustainability community; but as one of the world’s largest
producers of cookware and housewares, the Brazil-based conglomerate has a
significant reach — and thus, potential for significant impact.
Annually, Tramontina produces 90 million knives, 70 million saucepans and frying
pans and 50 million tools distributed in 120 countries. In the United States
and Canada, the company is largely known for aluminum cookware and tri-ply
clad cookware.
In a recent interview, CEO Marcelo Borges told Sustainable Brands®
that plastics are unsurprisingly the company’s biggest pain point as it seeks to
evolve a range of sustainability-related efforts — led by an announcement
earlier this year of its ambition to transition to 90 percent recycled materials
in its single-use
bags.
The company’s first Sustainability
Report, released in August, suggests this could reduce the CO2 output from its
packaging by as much as 60 percent. A result of Tramontina’s ongoing partnership
with environmental consulting firm Searious Business, the impact of this change
will be recognized across nearly 10 million poly bag units used annually and be
completed for all items with production dates beginning February 2023.
Progressively better packaging
Borges also notes the company is working feverishly to replace styrofoam with
cardboard across as much packaging as possible (in 2021, it reduced usage by
65,000 liters), with the eventual goal to phase it out altogether.
Another major transition has been the use of envelope-like packaging to reduce
the overall weight of product shipping. The company reports it’s been able to
reduce weight by 65 percent — not only reducing emissions but preventing seven
tons of plastic from entering the product stream annually.
Through an additional initiative of using 90 percent recycled plastic in
packaging for sinks, vats and tanks, Tramontina expects to recycle another
100,000 kg of plastic by the end of 2022.
Quietly spearheading circularity
Tramontina’s efforts in water stewardship and waste control date back to the
early 1990s, as early examples of a large South American company taking steps to
control its overall footprint and impacts.
“Water and effluent management have always gone hand in hand with our industrial
process development,” Borges says.
In 1992, Tramontina started to use rainwater in industrial production; and it
began the reuse of treated effluents in various industrial settings in 2002.
Further, the Tramontina Waste Center in Carlos Barbosa, Brazil — founded
in 1993 — is leading the company’s waste-management efforts with a focus on
fostering several circular economy projects.
“Any waste that goes through our Sorting Center and that can be recycled (scrap
aluminum, steel, plastic, cardboard, wood, etc) is part of our circular
projects,” Borges says. “Such waste materials are reused internally — avoiding
disposal of noble raw material, and reducing the need for a new purchase and,
consequently, a new extraction.”
In 2021, the company recycled more than 26,400 tons of scrap metal — including
over 11 thousand tons of aluminum — and reprocessed it internally into new raw
material.
In another example, one Tramontina division sends surplus plastic from various
production processes to its packaging supplier — which then adds waste from its
own operation and from other recycled resin suppliers to produce the packaging
for that
division.
The company says in 2021, 90 percent of the plastic used in the packaging was
sourced from recycling.
Other 2021 stats from Tramontina’s circularity efforts include:
-
93.5 percent of the waste generated by Tramontina was recycled or converted
to energy.
-
Changes in process allowed its Tramontina Cutelaria factory in Carlos
Barbosa to reduce more than 12.8 tons of plastic in its packaging.
-
Roughly 10 percent of Cutelaria's cardboard packaging need was met with
reused material, accounting for more than 2 million units.
-
The company composted 918 tons of waste for use as agricultural inputs.
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
Geoff is a freelance journalist and copywriter focused on making the world a better place through compelling copy. He covers everything from apparel to travel while helping brands worldwide craft their messaging. In addition to Sustainable Brands, he's currently a contributor at Penta, AskMen.com, Field Mag and many others. You can check out more of his work at geoffnudelman.com.
Published Nov 11, 2022 1pm EST / 10am PST / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET