P&G plant in Maine reaches zero-waste status

Auburn facility is first North American manufacturing site to reach zero watse-to-landfill.

December 15, 2010

The Procter & Gamble Company’s Auburn, ME site became the first P&G manufacturing plant in North America to achieve zero waste to landfill.

The feminine care facility worked with both employees and suppliers to implement a process that beneficially uses 100% of its waste. More than 60% is recycled or reused, while the remainder is converted to energy.

The P&G Global Asset Recovery Purchases (GARP) team is charged with finding external partners that can turn waste and non-performing inventory into something useful. That team connected the plant with a site solution provider, who helped sort all recyclable materials and convert existing non-recyclable materials to energy through incineration. The electricity from incineration is used by the incineration facility and the excess is sold to the local power company. The GARP team has diverted tens of thousands of tons from landfills while delivering tens of millions of dollars in cost recovery to the company in the past year alone.

"Auburn’s success is the latest milestone in our continued global effort to achieve zero manufacturing waste sent to landfill," said Len Sauers, P&G vice president of global sustainability. "GARP is a terrific example of how internal innovation and external partnerships have joined to help realize the company’s sustainability vision and goals."

Auburn is the ninth P&G global manufacturing plant to earn this distinction. Some of the other sites that have achieved this status include a Fabric and Home Care site in Belgium, a Beauty & Grooming site in the United Kingdom, and Feminine Care sites in Hungary and Italy.

The achievement of these sites to reach zero waste to landfill demonstrates continued progress toward P&G’s long-term environmental vision. This vision includes having zero manufacturing waste globally going to landfills, instead being beneficially reused and ending up in valued waste streams. The company also has a goal to achieve less than 0.5% disposed manufacturing waste by 2020.