Nestable pallet for all roller and chain conveyor systems

Cabka North Amer­ica Inc. presents new plas­tic pal­lets at PACK EXPO in Las Vegas from Sep­tem­ber 26 to 28. Accord­ing to Peter Braun, Vice Pres­i­dent Mar­ket­ing of Cabka North Amer­ica Inc., the high­light will be the CPP 130, the first nestable light weight pal­let that is com­pat­i­ble with all roller and chain con­veyor sys­tems.

This pal­let is a rad­i­cal depar­ture from Cabka’s today’s stan­dard nestable, light-weight series. The spe­cially designed bot­tom sup­port enables nesta­bil­ity and trans­porta­tion on auto­mated con­veyor sys­tems. The con­tact area of the 12 feet is 350 % more than other nestable pal­lets.  “The CPP 130 has already been approved for use,“ Braun affirms,  “The CPP 130 oper­ates suc­cess­fully at a Unilever plant for ship­ping blow molded bot­tles between the mold­ing plant and the fill­ing plant.“

Also Cabka will show the new CPP 350 series of cus­tomized pal­lets from half-size, like 48”x23”, 48”x20”, 40”x27”, 40”x24” to quarter-size 24”x20” and even sev­eral for­mats in between, like 27”x23”, 27”x20”, 24”x23”. CABKA’s engi­neers have made all of the mid­dle legs as a “dou­ble” leg and all the mid­dle ribs as dou­ble ribs. This will allow, to cut the pal­let in smaller sizes with­out los­ing any of its sta­bil­ity or strength.

These pal­lets can be pro­duced in small quan­ti­ties as well as large quan­ti­ties for a very rea­son­able price. The new CPP 350 series are designed to opti­mize cargo space, as well as it is an excel­lent dis­play pal­let.

Fur­ther­more, Cabka will be show­ing it’s 400 series, “con­tainer pal­lets”, nestable square pal­lets, designed to opti­mize con­tainer uti­liza­tion with no waste of cargo space.

Oth­ers like the CPP 530 with an upgrade in order to fit the auto­mo­tive mar­ket and the very strong indus­trial sized CPP 736 with a cru­ci­form perimeter-base will com­plete Cabka’s pre­sen­ta­tion on PACK EXPO this year.

CABKA North Amer­ica Inc., PACK EXPO # S-5751


About CABKA:
CABKA pro­duces export and reusable load car­ri­ers of plas­tics in Weira (Ger­many), St. Louis (USA) and Toronto (Canada). CABKA employs almost 300 staff mem­bers in Europe and North Amer­ica. CABKA prod­ucts are rep­re­sented in more than 40 coun­tries around the world.

Cap­tures:

Image 1
CABKA intro­duces the first nestable light weight pal­let that is com­pat­i­ble with all roller and chain con­veyor sys­tems.

 

 

Image 2
The con­tact area of the 12 feet enables nesta­bil­ity and trans­porta­tion on auto­mated con­veyor systems.


 

RPA Member Sponsors Support Informational and Networking Opportunities at PACK EXPO Las Vegas

Arling­ton, VA, August 24, 2011 – Thanks to the added sup­port of seven of its mem­bers, the Reusable Pack­ag­ing Asso­ci­a­tion (RPA) is host­ing its largest ever Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion and pro­vid­ing edu­ca­tional and net­work­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties at PACK EXPO Las Vegas. The pre­mium spon­sors for all events and the Pavil­ion are IFCO Sys­tems and CHEP. Gold spon­sors of the con­fer­ence ses­sions and Net­work­ing Recep­tion are iGPS and Brüel Inter­na­tional. Sil­ver spon­sors that are also sup­port­ing the Net­work­ing Recep­tion are Schoeller Arca Sys­tems, Inc., Buck­horn Inc, and The Kennedy Group.

The RPA is pre­sent­ing two con­fer­ence ses­sions as part of the Sus­tain­abil­ity Track of the Con­fer­ence at PACK EXPO Las Vegas. The edu­ca­tional ses­sions are designed to help atten­dees address key issues fac­ing users and poten­tial users of reusable pack­ag­ing. Also at the show, the RPA is host­ing a com­pre­hen­sive Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion that will show­case prod­ucts and ser­vices for reusable pack­ag­ing from 23 indus­try lead­ers, as well as mem­ber­ship infor­ma­tion at the RPA booth #6063. In addi­tion, the RPA is host­ing its annual Net­work­ing Recep­tion for mem­bers and their invited guests. Com­plete infor­ma­tion on all RPA activ­i­ties at PACKEXPO can be found at http://reusables.org/pack-expo-las-vegas-2011.

RPA would like to acknowl­edge the finan­cial sup­port of these mem­bers for our activ­i­ties dur­ing the show,” said Drew Mer­rill, Vice Pres­i­dent of Busi­ness Devel­op­ment & Strate­gic Plan­ning, Con­tainer and Pool­ing Solu­tions, Inc., RPA Chair­man. “Their sup­port enables the RPA to fur­ther its mis­sion of pro­mot­ing the value of reusable pack­ag­ing in today’s sup­ply chains at one of the world’s largest pack­ag­ing trade shows. It helps increase indus­try aware­ness to a broad audi­ence of pack­ag­ing pro­fes­sion­als and helps estab­lish our asso­ci­a­tion as the voice of our industry.”

PACK EXPO Las Vegas is an incred­i­ble stage for our indus­try,” said Jerry Wel­come, Pres­i­dent, RPA. “The RPA will be well rep­re­sented at the show with 23 mem­bers exhibit­ing in our Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion. We have devel­oped two, information-packed edu­ca­tional ses­sions as part of the Sus­tain­abil­ity Track of the PACK EXPO con­fer­ence pro­gram, and we will host our annual indus­try net­work­ing event on the evening of the first day of the show. All of these activ­i­ties sup­port our mis­sion and objec­tives as an orga­ni­za­tion, and are made pos­si­ble by the sup­port of our exhibit­ing mem­ber com­pa­nies and the very gen­er­ous help of our sponsors.”

About the RPA
The Reusable Pack­ag­ing Asso­ci­a­tion is a col­lab­o­ra­tive effort between man­u­fac­tur­ers, pool­ers, dis­trib­u­tors, retail­ers and edu­ca­tors to pro­mote the envi­ron­men­tal, safety, and eco­nomic ben­e­fits of reusable pack­ag­ing. The RPA serves as the col­lec­tive voice of the indus­try and uses its knowl­edge of the mem­bers’ prod­ucts and ser­vices to advance the adop­tion of reusable pack­ag­ing and sys­tems through­out the sup­ply chain. The RPA is focused on pro­mot­ing the expan­sion of reusables as the pre­ferred pack­ag­ing solu­tion across sup­ply chains in all indus­tries. For more infor­ma­tion, visit http://www.reusables.org or call (703) 2248284.

Media con­tact: Jerry Wel­come
PACK EXPO Booth #6063
1100 N. Glebe Rd, Suite 1010
Arling­ton, VA 22201
Phone: 7032248284 Fax: 7032435612
Email: info@reusables.org
Web Site: www.reusables.org
 

ORBIS Corporation to Appear at PACK EXPO Las Vegas

Oconomowoc, WIORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion, a man­u­fac­turer of sus­tain­able reusable pack­ag­ing and an expert in sup­ply chain opti­miza­tion, will be at the Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion at the Pack­Expo Inter­na­tional Expo in Las Vegas to show­case four recently released products/services that offer stark ben­e­fits – includ­ing the Stack’R Pal­let, Bulk­Pak HDMC 4845, Gro­cery Pal­let and ORBIS’ asset track­ing capa­bil­i­ties.

Stack’R Pal­let
Con­tin­u­ing the mis­sion of ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion of offer­ing the best prod­ucts for envi­ron­men­tal sus­tain­abil­ity in pack­ag­ing and logis­tics, the plas­tic reusable 40.0” x 48.0” x 5.9” Stack’R is 100 per­cent recy­clable and has been man­u­fac­tured to stand up to a wide-range of tem­per­a­tures and the harsh envi­ron­ments the pal­let may meet when pass­ing through the logis­tics chain serv­ing the food, phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal, con­sumer goods and the agri­cul­tural indus­tries. It is avail­able in FDA approved mate­r­ial and its hygienic design is ideal for all types of food and bev­er­age appli­ca­tions.

Gro­cery Pal­let
The all-plastic 40 x 48 Gro­cery Dis­tri­b­u­tion Pal­let is spe­cially engi­neered as a nestable pal­let with a nest ratio that opti­mizes space in stan­dard 53’ trail­ers. It is designed to effi­ciently store, ship and han­dle prod­uct through­out the gro­cery sup­ply chain. Its anti-skid sur­face holds cases and boxes in place in tran­sit and at retail loca­tions. The reusable Gro­cery Pal­let has con­toured cor­ners and smooth sur­faces to allow for easy han­dling and long-lasting dura­bil­ity.

HDMC BulkPak4845
The HDMC Bulk­Pak is designed with a sim­ple pur­pose – to safely and securely cre­ate more usable ship­ping space for cus­tomers’ goods by low­er­ing the weight of con­tain­ers and the space they take up. With Bulk­Pak, cus­tomers max­i­mize truck space and obtain a greater value for their stan­dard trans­porta­tion costs per bin. The col­lapsi­ble HDMC4845 has been engi­neered to offer 10% more inter­nal cubic capac­ity and to stack in a way that frees up addi­tional space in a stan­dard 53’ ship­ping trailer.

Asset Track­ing Capa­bil­i­ties
ORBIS offers com­pa­nies the abil­ity to track their reusable pack­ag­ing assets, includ­ing totes, trays and pal­lets. Asset track­ing helps com­pa­nies reduce loss and add vis­i­bil­ity within their sup­ply chain.

To set up a one-on-one meet­ing with ORBIS exec­u­tives to get a first-hand look at and learn more about the Stack’R, HDMC Bulk­Pak 4845, Gro­cery Pal­let or asset track­ing ini­tia­tives, please con­tact Colin Deval at 4142993942 or via e-mail at colin@corecreative.com. For more infor­ma­tion about ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion and its prod­uct lines, visit www.orbiscorporation.com.

WHAT: ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion presents Stack’R, HDMC Bulk­Pak 4845, and Gro­cery Pal­let
WHERE: Pack­Expo– Booth #5649 Las Vegas, NV
WHEN: Sep­tem­ber 2628, 2011
WHO: Saman­tha Goetz– ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion
CONTACT: Sched­ule one-on-one inter­views by con­tact­ing Colin Deval, for ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion at 4142993942, or via e-mail at colin@corecreative.com.

About ORBIS Corporation

ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion is a wholly owned sub­sidiary of Menasha Cor­po­ra­tion. With more than 150 years of mate­r­ial han­dling exper­tise and 50 years of plas­tics inno­va­tions, ORBIS con­sists of a port­fo­lio of busi­nesses that meet the mate­r­ial han­dling needs of com­pa­nies across many indus­tries. ORBIS helps world-class cus­tomers move their prod­uct faster, safer and more cost-effectively. Using a proven approach, ORBIS experts ana­lyze its cus­tomers’ sys­tems, design a solu­tion and exe­cute a reusable pack­ag­ing pro­gram for longer-term cost sav­ings and sus­tain­abil­ity. Using life-cycle assess­ments to com­pare reusable and single-use pack­ag­ing, ORBIS also helps cus­tomers reduce their over­all envi­ron­men­tal impact. ORBIS is a part of Menasha Cor­po­ra­tion, the 3rd old­est fam­ily owned busi­ness in the United States. As a stew­ard of sus­tain­abil­ity, ORBIS is com­mit­ted to a bet­ter world for future gen­er­a­tions. ORBIS tracks and mea­sures our own resource uti­liza­tion to con­tin­u­ously con­serve nat­ural resources and reduce waste.
 

Polymer Logistics Introduces Premium Retail Ready Crystal Clear Tray

Poly­mer Logis­tics has launched the pre­mium retail ready Crys­tal Clear series of reusable plas­tic trays designed for oper­a­tional func­tion­al­ity and cre­ative mer­chan­dis­ing. The Crys­tal Clear series, which includes three prod­uct ver­sions that each fea­ture see-through pan­els to high­light the prod­uct and have the same easy-to-use attrib­utes as all Poly­mer Logis­tics trays and con­tain­ers, is now avail­able to retail­ers, proces­sors, man­u­fac­tur­ers, dis­trib­u­tors and other marketers.

The pre­mium Crys­tal Clear tray is truly rev­o­lu­tion­ary because it offers so many more fea­tures than are cur­rently avail­able in retail ready pack­ag­ing. The trays high­light the vibrant brand­ing of the indi­vid­ual prod­ucts dis­played with­out the added cost of dis­pos­able branded case pack­ag­ing and are also more oper­a­tionally effi­cient,” said Jim Van­ge­los, Pres­i­dent – US, Poly­mer Logis­tics. “For the shop­per, it cre­ates an appeal­ing, con­ve­nient and orig­i­nal look at the retail location.”

The ben­e­fits of Crys­tal Clear trays for retail­ers and sup­pli­ers include expanded brand­ing, increased mer­chan­dis­ing options, fewer out-of-stocks, faster replen­ish­ment time, reduced prod­uct dam­age and lower space require­ments in the truck and at the store. The con­tain­ers are more envi­ron­men­tally sus­tain­able than tra­di­tional pack­ag­ing and offer sig­nif­i­cant cost sav­ings when com­pared with dis­pos­able mate­r­ial. They are ideal for pick­ing orders for direct store deliv­ery, are com­pat­i­ble with the Poly­mer Logis­tics pal­let and dolly line for easy maneu­ver­abil­ity and place­ment on retail floor and are made of an easy-to-clean poly­mer that resists mois­ture, insects and fungi.

The spec­i­fi­ca­tions of the three new prod­ucts are:

Crys­tal Clear RPC409AL
Dimen­sions: Exter­nal: 15.7” x 11.8” x 3.8”; Inter­nal: 15” x 10.8” x 3.4
Weight: 1.6 lbs; Max Load: 15.4 lbs
Pos­si­ble uses include yogurt, but­ter, choco­late bars and cold meats.

Crys­tal Clear RPC632AL
Dimen­sions: Exter­nal: 23.6” x 15.7” x 12.9”; Inter­nal: 22.8” x 15.1” x 12.6
Weight: 4.85 lbs; Max Load: 22 lbs
Pos­si­ble uses include chips, bis­cuits and bread.

Crys­tal Clear Heavy Duty
Dimen­sions: Exter­nal: 23.6” x 15.7” x 11.2”; Inter­nal: 22.8” x 15.1” x 9.5
Weight: 5.3 lbs; Max Load: 80 lbs
Pos­si­ble uses include milk, jars, sham­poo and cans.

For sales sup­port, call 8884647659.

About Poly­mer Logistics

Estab­lished in 1994, Poly­mer Logis­tics offers cus­tomized retail ready pack­ag­ing solu­tions and logis­tics ser­vices. The com­pany has helped clients reduce over­all costs by up to 60% while simul­ta­ne­ously increas­ing in-store item avail­abil­ity. Poly­mer Logis­tics num­bers over 15 ser­vice cen­ters and wash sites with ded­i­cated local teams in the USA and West­ern and Cen­tral Europe.
 

Global industrial & bulk packaging market will reach $134.9bn in 2011

Pack­ag­ing Europe
August 182011

Accord­ing to the recent report The Indus­trial & Bulk Pack­ag­ing Mar­ket 20112021 report from Vision­gain the global indus­trial and bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket is expected to reach $134.9B in 2011.

Although the indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket was neg­a­tively impacted by reduced mar­gins due to pres­sure from higher pro­duc­tion costs, the indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing indus­try still stands firm and is likely to enhance its mar­ket share in the global pack­ag­ing indus­try. Vision­gain cal­cu­lates that the global indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket will reach $134.9bn in 2011.

The growth in the indus­trial and bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket will also be backed by the ris­ing demand for con­tain­ers that com­ply with state, fed­eral and inter­na­tional reg­u­la­tory require­ments, espe­cially those con­cern­ing the trans­port and han­dling of haz­ardous chem­i­cals and the man­age­ment of haz­ardous waste. Addi­tion­ally, demand is likely to be strong from the chem­i­cal and oil/lubricants sec­tors, mainly dri­ven by ris­ing phar­ma­ceu­ti­cal pro­duc­tion due to increas­ing reliance on med­ica­tions influ­enced by health and safety con­cerns. The North Amer­i­can and West­ern Euro­pean economies are suc­cess­fully estab­lished mar­kets. How­ever, the grow­ing economies of Asia-Pacific (India and China), East­ern Europe (Ger­many and Rus­sia) and Latin Amer­ica (Brazil) offer tremen­dous poten­tial to explore.

Vision­gain expects the global indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket to be mainly influ­enced by the promis­ing per­for­mance from the Chi­nese and Indian, as well as Mid­dle East­ern and Latin Amer­i­can indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­kets. The indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket was severely impacted by the recent eco­nomic down­turn, which restricted fur­ther indus­trial devel­op­ments glob­ally. How­ever, tech­no­log­i­cal advance­ments related to light­weight pack­ag­ing will fur­ther boost the demand in the indus­try. Fur­ther­more, key indus­try play­ers and man­u­fac­tur­ers are opt­ing for bet­ter mate­ri­als for indus­trial pack­ag­ing pur­poses, which offer bet­ter stor­age capac­ity and safety.

Pack­ag­ing demands are increas­ing con­stantly. To meet these pack­ag­ing demands com­pa­nies are striv­ing to serve the cus­tomer base with the best resources, strate­gi­cally cop­ing with the cus­tomer trends and needs. The indus­trial pack­ag­ing com­pa­nies reg­u­larly mon­i­tor these changes in order to utilise, direct and pri­ori­tise their pack­ag­ing works as per the mar­ket require­ments. To sub­stan­ti­ate, the retail mar­ket is now heav­ily depen­dent on ‘just in time’ and fresh deliv­ery of prod­ucts. This involves orga­nized indus­trial pack­ag­ing stan­dards and plan­ning. With advanced pack­ag­ing tech­nolo­gies, cost-effective meth­ods and tech­nolo­gies in place, the indus­trial & bulk pack­ag­ing mar­ket is expected to expand globally.

The Indus­trial & Bulk Pack­ag­ing Mar­ket 20112021 report from Vision­gain details and analy­ses these global trends and explains where the most sig­nif­i­cant busi­ness oppor­tu­ni­ties are for indus­trial pack­ag­ing companies.

To view sam­ple pages click here

RPA Presenting Educational Conference Sessions and Hosting Comprehensive Reusable Packaging Pavilion at PACK EXPO Las Vegas

Arling­ton, VA, August 182011

The Reusable Pack­ag­ing Asso­ci­a­tion (RPA) is pre­sent­ing two con­fer­ence ses­sions as part of the Sus­tain­abil­ity Track of the Con­fer­ence at PACK EXPO Las Vegas. The edu­ca­tional ses­sions are designed to help atten­dees address key issues fac­ing users and poten­tial users of reusable pack­ag­ing. Also at the show, the RPA is host­ing a com­pre­hen­sive Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion that will show­case prod­ucts and ser­vices for reusable pack­ag­ing from 23 indus­try lead­ers, as well as mem­ber­ship infor­ma­tion at the RPA booth #6063. In addi­tion, the RPA is host­ing its annual Net­work­ing Recep­tion for mem­bers and their invited guests. Com­plete infor­ma­tion on all RPA activ­i­ties at PACKEXPO can be found at here.

The RPA has com­piled com­pre­hen­sive and var­ied resources for any­one inter­ested in learn­ing more about reusable pack­ag­ing, whether they are in the dis­cov­ery phase or want to gain added effi­cien­cies from exist­ing sys­tems,” said Jerry Wel­come, Pres­i­dent, RPA. “Atten­dees can par­tic­i­pate in our in-depth con­fer­ence ses­sions, relax and net­work at our Net­work­ing Recep­tion, and learn about the prod­ucts and ser­vices nec­es­sary to sup­port a reusable sup­ply chain from our 23 ven­dors in the Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion. Hav­ing so many sup­pli­ers exhibit­ing together will make it easy for atten­dees to find the solu­tions they need.”

The two ses­sions, the recep­tion, and the Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion sup­port the RPA’s mis­sion to pro­vide end users with the tools and infor­ma­tion they need to effec­tively uti­lize reusable pack­ag­ing solu­tions through­out their sup­ply chains. The RPA’s annual Net­work­ing Recep­tion will take place on Mon­day, Sept. 26. Tick­ets for the RPA Net­work­ing Recep­tion (N-243 sec­ond floor North Build­ing) will be avail­able in the RPA booth or from exhibit­ing mem­bers in the Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion. The RPA activ­i­ties at PACK EXPO are spon­sored by CHEP, IFCO Sys­tems, iGPS, Brüel, Buck­horn and Schoeller Arca Sys­tems, Inc.

RPA CONFERENCE EDUCATION SESSIONS

The RPA is devel­op­ing a com­pre­hen­sive, four-part cur­ricu­lum to help users make informed deci­sions and suc­cess­fully man­age the tran­si­tion to reusable pack­ag­ing. The sec­ond part of the cur­ricu­lum will be pre­sented dur­ing two ses­sions as part of the Sus­tain­abil­ity Track of the Con­fer­ence at PACK EXPO on Sept. 26 and 27.

Ses­sion One: Reusables 102 — Imple­ment­ing a Sus­tain­able Reusable Trans­port Pack­ag­ing Sys­tem;
Mon­day, Sep­tem­ber 26, 2011
N-259 Sec­ond Floor North Building

Ses­sion One, Part A (10:1511:15 a.m.) will intro­duce atten­dees to the reusable pack­ag­ing cur­ricu­lum and resources avail­able from the RPA to help end users find reusable solu­tions to meet their spe­cific trans­port pack­ag­ing needs. This will be fol­lowed by a pre­sen­ta­tion and panel dis­cus­sion of how to imple­ment a reusable solu­tion, includ­ing how to align the resources and key per­son­nel crit­i­cal to build­ing a suc­cess­ful reusable solution.

Ses­sion One, Part B (11:30 a.m. — 12:30 p.m.) will focus on bet­ter under­stand­ing the finan­cial struc­ture and deci­sions which must be made at this phase of imple­ment­ing a suc­cess­ful reusable pack­ag­ing strat­egy. Pre­sen­ters for Ses­sion One will include Bob Klimko, ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion; Drew Mer­rill, Con­tainer and Pool­ing Solu­tions (CAPS); Andy DeWitt, TOSCA; and pan­elists from end user com­pa­nies that have adopted reusable solu­tions.

Ses­sion Two: Man­ag­ing and Pro­tect­ing Your Reusable Pack­ag­ing Assets
Tues­day, Sep­tem­ber 27, 2011
N-259 Sec­ond Floor North Building

(Part A 910:00 a.m.; Part B 10:1511:15 a.m.) This two-part pro­gram is designed to help end users of reusable pack­ag­ing bet­ter under­stand the issue of prod­uct loss, and develop sys­tem­atic approaches to bet­ter man­age their valu­able reusable resources. From a sim­ple paper and pen­cil account­ing sys­tem to com­plex RFID solu­tions, man­ag­ing a company’s reusable assets is an impor­tant part of the sup­ply chain process. This two-part ses­sion will fea­ture pre­sen­ta­tions, an end user panel dis­cus­sion, and best prac­tices case stud­ies to help users min­i­mize loss of their valu­able assets. Pre­sen­ters include Keith Schall of Con­tainer and Pool­ing Solu­tions Inc. (CAPS).

To reg­is­ter for the RPA con­fer­ence ses­sions at PACK EXPO, click here.

RPA REUSABLE PACKAGING PAVILION
 

The Reusable Pack­ag­ing Pavil­ion will be located on the first floor of the South Build­ing at the Las Vegas Con­ven­tion Cen­ter. In the Pavil­ion, atten­dees will find man­u­fac­tur­ers of reusable pack­ag­ing prod­ucts, providers of reusable ser­vices such as pool­ers and tech­nol­ogy, and infor­ma­tion on join­ing the RPA.

Exhibitors include:

• Anwood Logis­tics Sys­tems Co, Ltd. (Booth #6060)
• Buck­horn Inc. (Booth #5752)
CABKA North Amer­ica (Booth #5751)
CHEP (Booth #5749)
• Con­tainer and Pool­ing Solu­tions Inc. (CAPS) (Booth #5750)
• Coro­plast Inc. (Booth #5952)
CTC Tech­nolo­gies (Booth #5950)
• Fitz­mark, Inc. (Booth #6063)
• Geor­gia Pacific (Booth #6062)
• Green­line Armor (Booth #5651)
IFCO Sys­tems (Booth #5845)
• iGPS (Booth #6065)
• The Kennedy Group (Booth #5745)
• Lomold USA LLC (Booth #5652)
• Mill­wood Incor­po­rated (Booth #5850)
• Monoflo Inter­na­tional Inc. (Booth #5852)
ORBIS Cor­po­ra­tion (Booth #5649)
• Poly­mer Logis­tics (Booth #5945)
• Poly­mer Solu­tions Inter­na­tional (Booth #5951)
• Quick-Crate (Booth 5946)
• Rehrig Pacific (Booth #5502)
• Schoeller Arca Sys­tems Inc. (Booth #5848)
• Trienda/Spara Logis­tics (Booth #5948)

About the RPA

The Reusable Pack­ag­ing Asso­ci­a­tion is a col­lab­o­ra­tive effort between man­u­fac­tur­ers, pool­ers, dis­trib­u­tors, retail­ers and edu­ca­tors to pro­mote the envi­ron­men­tal, safety, and eco­nomic ben­e­fits of reusable pack­ag­ing. The RPA serves as the col­lec­tive voice of the indus­try and uses its knowl­edge of the mem­bers’ prod­ucts and ser­vices to advance the adop­tion of reusable pack­ag­ing and sys­tems through­out the sup­ply chain. The RPA is focused on pro­mot­ing the expan­sion of reusables as the pre­ferred pack­ag­ing solu­tion across sup­ply chains in all indus­tries. For more infor­ma­tion, visit http://www.reusables.org or call (703) 2248284.

Media con­tact: Jerry Wel­come
PACK EXPO Booth #6063
1100 N. Glebe Rd, Suite 1010
Arling­ton, VA 22201
Phone: 7032248284 Fax: 7032435612
Email: info@reusables.org
Web Site: www.reusables.org

Total recall

By Peter Bradley, Edi­to­r­ial Direc­tor
DC Veloc­ity
August 16, 2011

When E. coli tainted food caused a num­ber of deaths and thou­sands of ill­nesses across much of West­ern Europe ear­lier this year, one of the great­est prob­lems inves­ti­ga­tors faced was find­ing the source of the deadly bac­te­ria. That has been the case in sev­eral out­breaks caused by strains of E. coli or sal­mo­nella in both Europe and North America.

But con­tain­ing the dam­age may get eas­ier in the future. In the last few years, gov­ern­ments, health agen­cies, and the food, food­ser­vice, and gro­cery indus­tries have imple­mented a wide vari­ety of ini­tia­tives both to pre­vent those out­breaks and to respond swiftly when they do occur. One of the most crit­i­cal parts of those efforts is quickly track­ing down the source of the ill­nesses and get­ting the tainted goods out of the sup­ply chain. That has meant added respon­si­bil­ity for man­agers of food sup­ply chains. To enable inves­ti­ga­tors to track ill­nesses from the point of the out­break back through the dis­tri­b­u­tion net­work requires good infor­ma­tion along each step of the dis­tri­b­u­tion process.

The indus­try has taken sev­eral steps in this direc­tion in recent years. For exam­ple, under terms of the U.S. Bioter­ror­ism Act of 2002, passed out of fear that ter­ror­ists might try to tam­per with the nation’s food sup­ply, every facil­ity that han­dles food is now required to keep records doc­u­ment­ing the move­ment of its prod­ucts “one step for­ward, one step back” in the sup­ply chain. How­ever, indus­try lead­ers have long felt the need for a more effi­cient and sys­tem­atic approach to track­ing goods through­out the entire sup­ply chain.

Now, an ini­tia­tive by trade groups rep­re­sent­ing pro­duce farm­ers in North Amer­ica promises to extend trace­abil­ity back to the field and day the food was har­vested. That effort, the Pro­duce Trace­abil­ity Ini­tia­tive (PTI), calls for the elec­tronic col­lec­tion and stor­age of track­ing data as goods move through the dis­tri­b­u­tion process. The over­ar­ch­ing goal is to enable inves­ti­ga­tors to rapidly track cases back through the sup­ply chain should an out­break occur.

A com­mon lan­guage

The PTI is a joint effort by the U.S. Pro­duce Mar­ket­ing Asso­ci­a­tion, the Cana­dian Pro­duce Mar­ket­ing Asso­ci­a­tion, the United Fresh Pro­duce Asso­ci­a­tion, and GS1 US (for­merly the Uni­form Code Coun­cil). Pro­po­nents believe detailed chain-of-custody infor­ma­tion would pro­tect pro­duc­ers as well as con­sumers. Once inves­ti­ga­tors deter­mine the source of con­t­a­m­i­na­tion, they could quickly track those prod­ucts down and remove them from the sup­ply chain while avoid­ing broad recalls that force com­pa­nies to dis­pose of uncon­t­a­m­i­nated food.

The ini­tia­tive calls for iden­ti­fy­ing every case of pro­duce at the time of har­vest with a label con­tain­ing both human read­able text and bar-coded infor­ma­tion on the source of the food. The PTI is more than just another label­ing man­date, how­ever. In addi­tion to extend­ing label­ing back to the fields and orchards, it’s par­tic­u­larly notable for its estab­lish­ment of stan­dard nomen­cla­ture for prod­uct identification—something that’s essen­tial to achiev­ing elec­tronic trace­abil­ity across the entire dis­tri­b­u­tion net­work. At the heart of the ini­tia­tive is a pro­vi­sion call­ing for key pieces of prod­uct iden­ti­fi­ca­tion data to be encoded on labels in a com­mon for­mat that can be read by each receiv­ing and ship­ping facility—including DCs—along the sup­ply chain. Essen­tially, that would allow food han­dlers at every stage of the process to cap­ture detailed track­ing data for their elec­tronic records with a swipe of a bar code.

The stan­dards adopted by PTI con­form with those devel­oped by GS1 US for sup­ply chain man­age­ment and con­trol. (GS1 US is the U.S. affil­i­ate of GS1, an inter­na­tional orga­ni­za­tion that devel­ops stan­dards for improv­ing sup­ply chain effi­ciency and vis­i­bil­ity across mul­ti­ple sec­tors.) Specif­i­cally, each case must be labeled with a 14-digit GS1 Global Trade Item Num­ber (GTIN), which will iden­tify the “man­u­fac­turer” or grower, and 2) a lot num­ber iden­ti­fy­ing the batch from which the pro­duce came.

As for when all this will take effect, the deadline’s com­ing up quickly. The PTI’s lead­er­ship has set a tar­get of achiev­ing “supply-chain wide adop­tion of elec­tronic trace­abil­ity of every case of pro­duce by the year 2012.”

David Sen­er­chia, direc­tor of new busi­ness devel­op­ment for print­ing and label­ing spe­cial­ist Zebra, says the ini­tia­tive promises to take track­ing and trac­ing to the next level in terms of both speed and effi­ciency. “The Bioter­ror­ism Act required a trail of cus­tody, but no specifics on how you did it as long as you could do it,” he says. “But a num­ber of events made it clear you had to do it rel­a­tively quickly and that made peo­ple think about how they have to have elec­tronic data cap­ture. Grow­ers pick­ing prod­uct five or six years ago were not label­ing the case, though they were keep­ing records. Now, the case can go from field to the local retailer or a full-scale dis­tri­b­u­tion chan­nel and at each point, we can store data in a com­mon way that all par­ties in the sup­ply chain can share.” In addi­tion, the PTI allows the indus­try to get a jump on new food trace­abil­ity man­dates included in the Food Safety Mod­ern­iza­tion Act, signed into law by Pres­i­dent Obama early this year. “The law gives the Food and Drug Admin­is­tra­tion increased author­ity to develop and enforce reg­u­la­tions,” says Sen­er­chia. “The indus­try wants to get ahead of that.”

Label­ing in the great out­doors

With that 2012 tar­get date loom­ing, label­ing and print­ing spe­cial­ists have been under pres­sure to bring suit­able equip­ment to market—specifically, portable print­ers and label­ers that can stand up to use in fields and orchards as well as labels that can with­stand rugged han­dling yet remain read­able. But equip­ment sup­pli­ers have stepped up to the plate. For instance, Inter­mec, a man­u­fac­turer of print­ers and related media, offers options such as rugged mobile print­ers or fixed print­ers that could be mounted in a vehi­cle, along with label stock able to hold up under rainy or wet conditions.

Don Blan­ton, man­ager of prod­uct mar­ket­ing for Inter­mec, cites one cus­tomer, Wash­ing­ton Fruit & Pro­duce, that uses Inter­mec scan­ners and bar-code tech­nol­ogy from Washington-based Pacific ID to ship more than 3 mil­lion apples a day. The bar codes and read­ers enable the com­pany to deter­mine the orchard of ori­gin for the apples and to-the-minute data on when the fruit was packed, he says.

Blan­ton adds that fur­ther enhance­ments are under way. He reports that tech­nol­ogy in the works will allow GPS loca­tion infor­ma­tion to be inte­grated into bar-code data. “We’re work­ing with sev­eral part­ners on the end game,” he says. The goal, he says, is to be able to scan a bar code and know the full his­tory of a case of pro­duce back to where and when it was picked. “We are not quite there yet, but the pro­duce grow­ers are tak­ing the ini­tia­tive,” he says.

In the mean­time, devel­op­ers con­tinue to work on scan­ners and read­ing devices that will serve mul­ti­ple pur­poses. Thomas Heit­man, man­ager of solu­tions con­sult­ing for sys­tems inte­gra­tor Peak Tech­nolo­gies, says, “What we really need within the same device is a com­bi­na­tion of bar codes that iden­tify the prod­uct along with con­nec­tiv­ity out­side of the four walls—in the truck or in the field—and GPS con­nec­tiv­ity that can track where a vehi­cle has been and track prod­uct onto and off the truck. You don’t want a per­son to have five or six things hang­ing on a belt. One thing is much eas­ier and more cost effective.”

Hit­ting the mile­stones

As for where the ini­tia­tive stands to date, PTI lead­ers say the pro­duce indus­try is well on its way to meet­ing its 2012 goals of achiev­ing sup­ply chain-wide elec­tronic trace­abil­ity of every case of pro­duce. Ear­lier this year, a PTI sur­vey of its Lead­er­ship Coun­cil mem­ber com­pa­nies showed 79 per­cent of par­tic­i­pants through­out the sup­ply chain—growers, pack­ers, ship­pers, retail­ers, whole­salers, and food­ser­vice firms—were on track to hit PTI mile­stones by next year. Apply­ing labels in the field may be a small part of the broader effort to ensure a safe food sup­ply chain. But the abil­ity to cap­ture chain-of-custody data back to the field and orchard should pro­vide an impor­tant tool to inves­ti­ga­tors and the indus­try alike.

For more info on the PTI and label­ing require­ments for grow­ers, visit www.producetraceability.org.

Rehrig Pacific Company Introduces the PubKeg™ Black Exchange Program

Busi­ness­Wire · Aug. 16, 2011 | Last Updated: Aug. 16, 2011 8:00 AM ET

Rehrig Pacific Com­pany, a lead­ing man­u­fac­turer of plas­tic pal­lets, reusable trans­port & dis­tri­b­u­tion crates, carts and con­tain­ers for the mate­r­ial han­dling, food & bev­er­age, agri­cul­ture, and recy­cling & waste indus­tries is pleased to intro­duce the Pub­Keg™ Black exchange pro­gram, a new pooled solu­tion for 1-way plas­tic kegs for brew­ers and beer distributors.

Intro­duced by Rehrig Pacific in 2009, the plas­tic Pub­Keg is a brewer-branded, sixth bar­rel alter­na­tive to metal kegs. Avail­able in a range of stan­dard col­ors, the Pub­Keg has a sim­i­lar foot­print to the quar­ter slim bar­rel keg, yet weighs nine pounds less than a 1/6th bar­rel metal keg. Pub­Kegs give brew­ers a way to enter new mar­kets or intro­duce sea­sonal fla­vors with­out using exist­ing cooper­age or scarce metal kegs dur­ing peak periods.

Rehrig is now offer­ing Pub­Keg Black, a reusable pack­ag­ing option for higher vol­ume Pub­Keg cus­tomers. The exchange pro­gram will pro­vide a pooled solu­tion for 1-way Pub­Kegs. Pub­Keg cus­tomers who can order in full truck­load quan­ti­ties will qual­ify if they accept a black-colored body and lid with a return-for-deposit label on the Pub­Keg. As lead­ers in reusable pack­ag­ing solu­tions, Rehrig is col­lab­o­rat­ing with their sub­sidiary, Rehrig Penn Logis­tics to employ their exist­ing recla­ma­tion and refur­bish­ment ser­vice capa­bil­i­ties to launch the exchange program.

Under the pro­gram, each Pub­Keg Black ordered comes with a $3.50 imme­di­ate cash rebate. All black Pub­Kegs returned to one of the 14 des­ig­nated Rehrig or Rehrig Penn recy­cling depots will receive an addi­tional refund of $3.50 payable to the returnee whether it’s the brewer, the dis­trib­u­tor, the retailer, or the bar owner. This recy­cling pro­gram will allow the same no-hassle ship­ping and track­ing capa­bil­i­ties offered by the stan­dard Pub­Keg purchase.

For a closer look at the Pub­Keg, visit Rehrig Pacific in booth #S-5502 at Pack Expo Las Vegas from Sep­tem­ber 26th to 28th and at the Great Amer­i­can Beer Fes­ti­val from Sep­tem­ber 28th through Octo­ber 1st in Den­ver, Col­orado. To find out more about the fea­tures and ben­e­fits of the Pub­Keg™ Black Exchange Pro­gram, con­tact Brian Lin­dell at (770) 3399888 or visit: www.pubkeg.com. For more infor­ma­tion about Rehrig Pacific Com­pany and their prod­ucts for the mate­r­ial han­dling, food & bev­er­age and agri­cul­ture indus­tries, visit: www.rehrigpacific.com.

CHEP Extends Strategic Relationship With P&G

ORLANDO, Fla., Aug 16, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE)CHEP, an indus­try leader in pal­let and con­tainer pool­ing solu­tions, announced that it has renewed its con­tract with con­sumer prod­ucts leader Proc­ter & Gam­ble. CHEP pal­lets are used to trans­port the major­ity of P&G’s branded products.

CHEP has been work­ing with P&G for more than 15 years. The rela­tion­ship began after the suc­cess with trans­porta­tion cost reduc­tions and ware­house pro­duc­tiv­ity improve­ments with CHEP pal­let pool­ing in Europe and Aus­tralia. The two com­pa­nies work closely to ensure con­tin­u­ous advance­ment in the retail sup­ply chain by sup­port­ing joint-industry activ­i­ties like sus­tain­abil­ity and standardization.

CHEP Senior Vice Pres­i­dent, Sales and Chief Cus­tomer Offi­cer Brian Mal­loy said: “We truly appre­ci­ate the trust P&G places with us every time one of their prod­uct loads leaves a pro­duc­tion or dis­tri­b­u­tion facil­ity and is shipped to a cus­tomer on one of our pal­lets. It is a trust we don’t take for granted and one we are com­mit­ted to main­tain­ing for a long time by allo­cat­ing the opti­mal peo­ple and asset resources.”

Rick Hughes, P&G Chief Pur­chas­ing Offi­cer said, “CHEP is a long-term strate­gic part­ner in touch with our pro­duc­tiv­ity and sus­tain­abil­ity needs. Through its use of renew­able mate­ri­als and a pooled plat­form ser­vice, the CHEP pro­gram con­tributes to P&G sus­tain­abil­ity efforts by reduc­ing solid waste gen­er­a­tion and green­house gas emissions.”

About CHEP

CHEP is a global leader in man­aged, return­able and reusable pack­ag­ing solu­tions, serv­ing many of the world’s largest com­pa­nies in sec­tors such as con­sumer goods, fresh pro­duce, bev­er­age and auto­mo­tive. CHEP’s ser­vice is envi­ron­men­tally sus­tain­able and increases effi­ciency for cus­tomers while reduc­ing oper­at­ing risk and prod­uct dam­age. CHEP’s 7,500-plus employ­ees and 300 mil­lion pal­lets and con­tain­ers offer unbeat­able cov­er­age and excep­tional value, sup­port­ing more than 500,000 cus­tomer touch-points in 45 coun­tries. Our cus­tomer port­fo­lio includes global com­pa­nies and brands such as Proc­ter & Gam­ble, Sysco, Kellogg’s, Kraft, Nes­tle, Ford and GM. CHEP is part of Bram­bles Lim­ited. For more infor­ma­tion, visit www.chep.com .

Retail ready packs major opportunity for packaging suppliers, say Pira

By Rory Har­ring­ton, 11-Aug-2011
Food Pro­duc­tion Daily

Huge growth in demand for retail-ready packs (RRP) over the next five years will pro­vide mas­sive oppor­tu­ni­ties for pack­ag­ing sup­pli­ers, accord­ing to a report by Pira Inter­na­tional.

The mar­ket analy­sis pre­dicts that global demand will surge from 19m tonnes in 2010 to 27m tonnes by the end of the period – a jump of 42 per cent — in what the con­sul­tants describe as a “high-growth niche in the over­all pack­ag­ing market”.

RRP refers to pack­ag­ing sys­tems typ­i­cally made from cor­ru­gated board, solid fibre­board or rigid plas­tic. They include designs referred to as shelf-ready, display-ready or shopper-ready.

Their main aim is to reduce or avoid the need for in-store stock replace­ment of stock and pro­vide ben­e­fits to the total sup­ply chain, said Pira in its report The Future of Retail Ready Pack­ag­ing to 2016.

Retail­ers and RRP trend

The growth will be fuelled pri­mar­ily by retail­ers seek­ing to reach tougher bottom-line tar­gets in an increas­ingly com­pet­i­tive market

Under pres­sure from retail­ers seek­ing to improve in-store effi­cien­cies, RRP has emerged as a sys­tem designed to reduce the amount of han­dling required to place prod­ucts on the retail shelf whilst pro­vid­ing the con­sumer with easy access to prod­ucts,” said the research which cov­ers 14 coun­tries and 22 end-use segments.

Stress­ing the preva­lence of RRPs, Pira said that “most if not all of the major retail­ers glob­ally have adopted or are in the process of adopt­ing some form of RRP”.

They are turn­ing to RRPs in a bid to cut over­heads by reduc­ing labour costs, boost pro­duc­tiv­ity and reduce out-of-stock situations.

A sig­nif­i­cant pro­por­tion of dis­tri­b­u­tion costs are incurred in the final 50 metres of the jour­ney from the dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­tre, between the store back door and the retail shelf. Stream­lin­ing this oper­a­tion, for exam­ple by intro­duc­ing one-touch dis­play sys­tems, can have a marked effect on prof­itabil­ity for the retailer,” explained the report.

Growth dri­vers

Growth poten­tial is strongest in devel­op­ing regions such as Latin Amer­ica and Asia Pacific – although oppor­tu­ni­ties still remain in more mature mar­kets found in devel­oped economies.

Fastest expan­sion is fore­cast for China where is mar­ket share of RRPs is expected to increase from 15 per cent to 18 per cent by 2016.

Macro­eco­nomic fac­tors such as pop­u­la­tion growth, as well as micro­eco­nomic influ­ences such as print­ing tech­nol­ogy devel­op­ments and the use of white-top lin­ers are high­lighted as key growth drivers.

Seg­ment breakdown

Food accounts for 78 per cent of the RRP total, with bev­er­age a fur­ther 16 per cent. Non-food item make up just six per cent, although the research authors pre­dict this will rise over the review period to 7 per cent. Bev­er­age prod­ucts will cap­ture 18 per cent of the mar­ket by 2016, with food drop­ping slightly to account for 75 per cent.

Con­sump­tion of food and drink in the coun­tries sur­veyed is expected to climb from 6bn tonnes last year to almost 9bn by 2016. Food prod­ucts make up 63 per cent of pri­mary pack­ag­ing used in their dis­tri­b­u­tion, while bev­er­ages account for 25 per cent. The ana­lysts pre­dicted that food’s share of this seg­ment would rise to 66 per cent. For sec­ondary packs, food is expected to grow two per cent to hold a mar­ket share of 68 per cent in five years.

Cor­ru­gated designs account for almost 75 per cent of RRPs with tech­nol­ogy enabling improved graph­ics and per­for­mance. How­ever, the mate­ri­als share will slip by 0.5 per cent over the period.

Con­versely, plas­tic RRPs are expected to grow to almost a quar­ter by 2016, with gains made against mainly shrink-wrapped trays.

Within cor­ru­gated seg­ments, diecut boxes are expected to see major growth – thanks to the need for designs that are both more com­plex both in appear­ance and per­for­mance. These will account for 45 per cent of all RRP ship­ments by 2016, fore­cast Pira.

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