31 Jan 2024

Two Sides launches awareness campaign to promote print and paper's great environmental story

 A Tom Jennings illustration

Today Two Sides launches a multifaceted awareness campaign across the UK to promote the sustainability of print and paper as 'Renewable, Recyclable and Powerful'. The Two Sides (www.twosides.info) initiative involves almost 100 companies and associations spanning the Graphic Communications Supply Chain whose goal is to promote the responsible production and use of print and paper.

Over the next 12 months more than 20,000 media specifiers and influencers will receive information about Print and Paper's good environmental record and dispel many of the myths that people may have. Integrated communications management firm Lateral Group has collaborated with 300million on branding and design, RA Creative on web design and Haymarket Publications to develop and produce the promotional campaign.  It includes direct mail, a series of online and print advertisements in PrintWeek, Marketing, Campaign and Brand Republic, a competition to visit European forests and a fact-filled website.

"Our aim is to start to change perceptions about the production and use of print and paper", explains Martyn Eustace, Two Sides Director. "We're determined to see that print and paper remains an essential part of today's media mix. The initiative is designed to wake people up to the fact that print and paper is a powerful and sustainable medium and encourage them to visit the Two Sides web site to discover even more so they can make informed decisions about the best medium for their communication programmes. We are starting in the UK and plans are already underway to spread the initiative across the rest of Europe."

Two Sides is targeting those who have the most influence in the choice of communications media including: agencies and designers, corporates, retailers, government, journalists, politicians and publishers.  The program of activity kicks off with a direct mail pack of six postcards (printed on Zen Pure White donated by GF Smith) that each highlight key myths and misunderstandings about paper and print, along with enlightening facts. Each card is illustrated by Tom Jennings, a former designer who has moved into illustration full-time. The style of Tom's pen and ink illustrations perfectly reflect the creative properties of paper. A different artist will be chosen for the next three direct mail packs issued over the next eight months.

Lateral Group is handling media planning and the data processing, printing and distribution of the direct mail items. The company has heavily supported the Two Sides' initiative from its inception and has donated the services of a project manager to oversee the roll out. "Paper and print have for some time been the 'un-green' medium in the marketing world," says Nick Dixon, Lateral Group CEO. "Two Sides demonstrates and accurately details that paper and print is still a powerful communication in today's world, as well being a sustainable resource, successfully dispelling any myths about its non-green credentials. At Lateral Group, we promote and champion our mantra of Integrated Communications Management. Only by knowing your audience can you know how to market to them. Print is still very much a part of today's complex and multi channel world".

Six different ads reflect and complement the direct mail campaign, delivering simple statements designed to surprise, educate and explain how the print and paper industry is producing sustainable and effective material.  Two Sides highlights facts such as:

- Bread from wheat, milk from cows, paper from trees: What's more natural than Print & Paper

- 1.5 million football pitches of new trees. Every year: More trees are planted every year than harvested and forests have grown by more than 30% since 1950

- The original wireless communication: Producing a reading a traditional newspaper can consume 20% less energy than reading news online for more than 30 minutes

- What a great sustainable idea: Half the UK's energy requirement is predicted to be needed to drive PCs in the next 10 years. Print and Paper, based on natural and renewable material, can be the sustainable way to communicate.

Martin Lawless, creative director at 300million says: 'Our approach from the start was to bring fairness to the complex emotions and issues that surround the use of paper and print. With balance comes a more rational, objective and improved understanding of what the best thing to do is when it comes to considering the commission of offline communications. This balance is expressed in the name as well as the measured yet forthright logo, brand identity and engaging messaging that get people  to reconsider and rethink print and paper.'

Finally, a competition launched today gives ten people the opportunity to see sustainable forestry and paper making in action at first hand in a choice of forests around Europe. To enter go to www.twosides.info.

Melville Graphics goes even greener with ALD

Melville Graphics and ALD

ALD helps take the NEC display services provider to the greener side of the fence

Melville Graphics, part of Melville Exhibition and Event Services who prints and provides display services to the exhibition industry, has taken an important step in underlining its green credentials by deciding to use the services of ALD Industry Ltd for disposal of their PVC banner material – both reinforced and unreinforced.

Nathan Rowe – production manager at Melville Graphics Coventry – explained why this was such a great time to take advantage of the ALD Industry service, it was customer driven and he has photographic evidence to prove it: "The photo is of the guys feeding through the United Business Media (UBM) banners we did for IFSEC 2009. This was the first official show where we were specifically asked to get them recycled as UBM are keen for their contractors to obtain the BS 8901 standard for sustainability in the exhibition and events industry.” BS 8901 is the British Standard that has been developed specifically for the events industry. The standard provides a “framework of good practice and defines the requirements for a sustainable event management system to ensure an enduring and balanced approach to economic activity, environmental responsibility and social progress”.

In today's ecologically aware climate it is important that all aspects of an event are sustainable. Event organisers need to consider the social, economic and environmental impacts of organising their event. Every choice, from the venue and travel arrangements, through to the content of the delegate packs needs be designed to be as ecologically responsible as possible, especially when dealing with non-biodegradable display materials.

Melville is an ISO 14001 company and an “Association of Events Organisers (AEO) Excellence 09 Awards” winner and is therefore very keen to fly the green flag not only for its customers and exhibitors at the NEC but also for Birmingham City Council, the partners for the NEC Group in their environmental aspirations. ISO 14001's sole purpose is to specify a clear framework of control for a company's environmental management system and it makes a powerful statement about any organisation's commitment to the environment giving it internationally recognised "green credentials".

ALD Industry mainly recycles PVC in the UK for ISO 14001 registered companies, and its MD Mike Turner said: “We are delighted to welcome Melville Graphics to our ever growing recycling family and we hope that this move will pave the way for other environmentally concerned exhibition centres and printers to do the same.” Mike's background as the director of The Digital and Screen Printing Association (DSPA now Prism) until the end of 2007 brought him into daily contact with printers who routinely produce display material. As a result he understands industry concerns and has been heavily involved in advising on environmental policy decisions. Mike uses this experience to assist the advertising, display, point of sale and printing industries in formulating environmental policy and can help enable these companies to completely satisfy their customer’s increasingly green requirements.

ALD Industry Ltd is registered with the Environment Agency EAN/953112/CB and can be reached by telephone on: 01483 277387 or 07843 465275. Email is info@aldgroup.co.uk and the Website: www.aldgroup.co.uk

New report on Current State of Green Printing

green earth

WhatTheyThink, the leading news and information site for the graphic communications industry, announces the immediate availability of Printing Continues to Go Green: An Updated WhatTheyThink Primer on Environmental Sustainability in the Commercial Printing Industry. This 68-page report provides an overview of the state of green printing initiatives in the U.S. commercial printing industry.

The report, an update to a special primer report first published in April 2008, provides the results of a June 2009 survey of commercial printing establishments conducted by WhatTheyThink’s Economics and Research Center, descriptions of the leading green certification organizations—such as the Sustainable Green Printing Partnership, the Forest Stewardship Council, and the Sustainable Forestry Initiative, to name but three—and a variety of steps commercial printers can take toward becoming environmentally sustainable and responsible. The report also seeks to dispel the increasingly common notion that print is more environmentally harmful than electronic media.

Printing Continues to Go Green gathers together secondary research that gauges the real “carbon cost” of a Google search, the environmental impact of the myriad servers and workstations that comprise the Internet, the looming e-waste epidemic, and more.

The report also offers conclusions, recommendations, and strategies both simple and complex for companies that are interested in pursuing green initiatives, as well as resources with which to obtain additional information.

Printing Continues to Go Green is available for online purchase at the WhatTheyThink Store in PDF format

Researcher’s Comments...

“How many times have you heard, ‘We’ve cut down on the use of print to save trees’; ‘Electronic media are more environmentally friendly than print’; ‘Print just clogs landfills’; ‘We’re reducing our carbon footprint by printing less’? We don’t grant the premise that print is less environmentally responsible than other media, but the green printing issue is no longer ‘How green is my printer?’ but has now become ‘How green is print at all?’ Every human activity has an environmental impact of some kind, but it now behooves the printing industry to fight back by showing how environmentally sustainable we can be as an industry.”

According to the Report…

— in a June 2009 survey conducted by WhatTheyThink’s Economics and Research Center, the top green practice that U.S. commercial printers say they have currently implemented is “identify itself in marketing and sales materials and promotions as an environmentally sensitive business,” cited by 33% of all respondents, up from the 26% who said this in a March 2008 survey;

— 43% of all responding companies said that sustainable printing initiatives are “critically important to only a select few customers,” up from 41% in March 2008;

— 26% of all respondents say they plan to implement some form of certification from an environmentally sustainable printing authority, up from 20% in April 2008;

WhatTheyThink reports are available for online purchase at the WhatTheyThink Store in PDF format.

Availability

The WhatTheyThink special report, Printing Continues to Go Green: An Updated WhatTheyThink Primer on Environmental Sustainability in the Commercial Printing Industry is available for purchase by visiting the secure WhatTheyThink Store online at https://store.whattheythink.com/operations-management/printing-goes-green. The price for the 68-page report is $195. WhatTheyThink eStore customers can download this report in PDF Acrobat format immediately after purchase. An enterprise site license  for this report is also available for $995.

HP Designjet L65500 Latex printer and JM Textiles' PVC-free media help change jeans

HP Designjet L65500 

When Euro clothing retailer Jeans Only needed new in store imagery for their changing rooms it was vital to have graphics with no residual odour and that meet the highest standards of reduced environmental impact for a retail environment. They also needed high quality and the ability to refresh the imagery across all the European wide based stores.

The combination of the HP Designjet L65500 Latex printer and JM Textiles Mediatex Self Adhesive PVC free media provided the ideal solution. The HP Designjet L65500 with its non-toxic, odour free Latex inks has already won awards for its reduced environmental impact such as the European Digital Press award for Best Environmental Digital Printer 2008.

JM Textiles have long been committed to producing innovative and environmentally benign media. The entire JM Textiles range meets the Öeko-Tex Standard 100 standard one of the most stringent in the world. This standard ensures that end users can have total confidence that the media will have no harmful effect on the environment it is used in.

Andrew Edwards, Sign and Display Divisional Manager, ArtSystems, says: "This is typical of the demands we’re seeing now from both private and public sector clients. Not only do they want products that are more resource efficient and have a reduced environmental impact, they also want them to exceed the productivity of their legacy solutions. The HP Designjet L65500 and JM Textiles media do just this. Print service providers are now winning new business with this double benefit."

In the current economic climate resource efficiency and reduced environmental impact are becoming the core management tools to controlling costs and maximising profits. Solutions like the HP Designjet L65500 and JM Textiles Media are just one example of their practical application.

Epson Announces its “Environmental Vision 2050”

altDuring a press conference in Brussels, Belgium, Akihiko Sakai, Executive Officer, Corporate Strategy Office, Seiko Epson Corporation, unveiled the company’s Environmental Vision for the next generation. Speaking on the eve of the European Green Week, Sakai outlined an ambitious multi-part program to address some of the most pressing environmental concerns facing the global community looking towards 2050 and how Epson intends to tackle them over the next 10 years.