GLOBAL FIRST AS LEADING CAN MANUFACTURER PASSES MAJOR ALUMINIUM SUSTAINABILITY MILESTONES

16 March 2020


 Ball Corporation announced today that it has earned the Aluminium Stewardship Initiative (ASI) certification for all 23 of its EMEA beverage can plants. This accomplishment is a major sustainability milestone for Ball, which is now the first beverage can manufacturer to meet ASI’s social, environmental and governance principles. The certification accompanies a commitment to significant carbon reductions by Ball, which will now be covering all of its operations in the European Union, Serbia and the UK with renewable energy. This follows the announcement by Ball that it has entered into agreements for 100% renewable energy in all of its North America operations by 2021. “We’re extremely proud to be the first beverage can manufacturer to achieve ASI certification,” said Ron Lewis, President, Ball Beverage Packaging EMEA. “With theirinfinite recyclability, aluminium cans are the fastest growing beverage packaging type in Europe. As consumers seek more environmentally friendly products, they can have confidence in aluminium’s strong sustainability credentials such as responsible sourcing. The certification, combined with our renewable energy investments, demonstrates Ball’s commitment to a low-carbon, sustainable economy.” UNDER STRICT EMBARGOUNTIL 00:01HRS THURS 3 MAR ASI is a multi-stakeholder initiative that provides assurance of responsible production, sourcing and stewardship of aluminium throughout its value chain. As consumers demand greater sustainability across packaged goods, the Aluminium Stewardship Initiative’s scheme aims to do for aluminium what the Forestry Stewardship Council (FSC) did for paper and wood, making sustainability performance a mainstream, visible issue. Ball has achieved both ASI’s Performance, and Chain of Custody (CoC) Standard certifications. The ASI Performance Standard is a measure of how much effort Ball is making across its plants to assess, manage and disclose its environmental, social and governance impacts. These include issues such as life-cycle thinking, recycling, greenhouse gas emissions, water and waste management, biodiversity, business integrity and the human rights of both workers and local communities. The ASI CoC Standard sets out requirements for the creation of a Chain of Custody for material that is produced and processed through the value chain. In Ball’s case, it links verified practices – certified under the ASI Performance Standard – from mining and remelting to casting, rolling, can manufacturing and filling. “We’re responding to a greater desire from consumers, across Europe and around the world, for genuinely sustainable and infinitely recyclable packaging solutions,” said Bjorn Kulmann, Director, Global Sustainability at Ball Corporation. “We’re working closely with our beverage customers to help them deliver on their sustainability commitments including on responsible sourcing practices. Ball is hugely proud of our achievements in getting certified and we call upon the rest of the aluminium industry to follow this standard.” “We are very pleased to award ASI Certification to, Ball Corporation, the world’s largest aluminium can maker and the first in its sector to have achieved this,” said Dr. Fiona Solomon, Chief Executive Officer, Aluminium Stewardship Initiative. “The ASI’s Performance Standard covers critical issues for the entire aluminium value chain. The programme is focused on responsible production, sourcing and stewardship of this important industrial metal. ASI Certification enablesthe aluminium industry to demonstrate responsibility and provide independent and credible assurance of performance. Supply-chain certification programs like ASI are becoming increasingly important for customers and stakeholders, who seek assurance that companies’ sustainability practices are genuine.” With 75% of aluminium ever produced still in use today around the world, the metal has a vital role to play in creating a truly circular economy. Ball is taking a lead on industry efforts to significantly increase the European recycling rate of aluminium beverage cans, currently at 75%. Recycling aluminium saves 95% of the energy required for the production of virgin aluminium, and so helps the global community to meet urgent carbon reduction targets. 



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