Corporations at Work
"TOWARD A SUSTAINABLE JAPAN - CORPORATIONS AT WORK"
ARTICLE SERIES Article No. 34
Aiming to Become a Social Printing Company - Ohkawa Printing Co., Ltd.
http://www.ohkawa-inc.co.jp/ (Japanese)
There are about 35,000 printing companies in Japan. However, the
number of these companies has been reduced by about 10 percent in the
past five years, due to selection by tight business environment and
the rapid spread of digital technology. In order to continue to be in
demand, what should a printing company do?
Ohkawa Inc., a mid-sized printing company located in Yokohama, puts
forth a unique vision of being a "social printing company (R)" to
contribute to building a sustainable society through the printing
business. The company is making an effort to reduce the environmental
impacts of all of its business activities and contributes in areas
related to the aging society and the medical field.
Such company initiatives have been given recognition by the Green
Purchasing Awards grand prize, the first time for a printing company,
at the Eighth Green Purchasing Awards in Japan, on December 12, 2005.
The awards are sponsored by the Green Purchasing Network, which is
composed of companies, governmental bodies and consumer groups, and is
awarded annually to associations that display outstanding efforts in
their green purchasing activities of preferentially purchasing
products that have less impact on the environment.
http://www.gpn.jp/event/award/index.html (in Japanese)
Ohkawa Printing Co., Ltd. started out as a company that prints labels
for pharmaceuticals, and will celebrate its 125th anniversary in 2006.
The company employs 40 workers, and the annual sales amounted to 600
million yen (US$5.31 million) as of March 2004. The company mainly
prints packages for medicines and food, and a broad range of printing
materials, such as brochures, leaflets, and product information.
Mr. Tetsuo Ohkawa is the sixth president. He had been thinking for several
years about how printed materials would be needed
by society over the next 100 years. When he thought
about this, going back to the origins of the company,
he realized that Ohkawa serves society by printing
error-free materials, such as pharmaceutical product
inserts on the effects of medicines.
As in the example of those inserts, printed materials for medicines
sometimes contain life-critical information for those who take the
medicine, so mistakes are not permissible. It is of utmost importance
to convey correct information, which allows the company to contribute
to society through its business. These thoughts led the company to
create its vision as a "Social Printing Company."
Now the company has a variety of initiatives, such as quality control
systems for printed materials in the medical and other fields,
"universal design" features that serve not only healthy people with
normal abilities, but also the elderly and the physically challenged,
and what it calls "Eco Line (R)" for environmentally friendly printing.
Among these initiatives, the most outstanding is the Eco Line
initiative. This is a unique concept that incorporates technologies
that reduce environmental impacts throughout the entire printing
process, starting from the choice of materials, printing, bookbinding
and delivery. This is how it works.
In their business activities, the sales staffs use public
transportation as much as possible. If they need to use a car, they
use a hybrid vehicle owned by the company. When it is not available,
they use the local "car sharing system," shared with others in the
community.
How about the actual production process? First, whenever possible,
they use eco-friendly paper. They can select one from the following
five options according to the printing purpose: Forest Stewardship
Council (FSC) certified paper (made from pulp from sustainably-managed
forests); chlorine-free bleaching pulp paper; paper made from wood
cuttings arising from forest management; non-wood kenaf paper (made
from a fast-growing plant suitable for paper); wood-free bagasse paper
(using the residue from sugar cane production); and recycled paper.
To promote FSC-certified paper, Ohkawa Printing obtained
Chain-of-Custody (CoC) certification, a certification system for the
management of process and distribution, in June 2004. CoC
certification verifies the flow of forest products certified by the
Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) through the supply chain, from the
forest to the point of sale. The FSC logo can be placed on printed
materials from a CoC-certified printing company. Many major printing
companies have obtained the CoC certification, but among small-and
medium-sized companies, less than 1 percent done so.
The use of FSC-certified paper in Ohkawa Printing was 1.3 percent of
the total paper use over seven months from April through October 2004.
The volume is expected to increase in the future.
For printing ink, the company is gradually introducing ink that does
not contain volatile organic compounds (VOCs). Although the use of
plant-derived ink containing soybean oil has been increasing in the
printing industry recently, 60 to 80 percent still contains
petroleum-derived solvents. The company has replaced these with
VOC-free inks for all four basic colors (black, dark blue, red and
yellow) since November 2005. The use of the VOC-free ink will soon be
20 percent of the total for the company, according to estimates from
the previous year. Combining this amount with the soybean ink, about
80 percent of the company's printed materials will be printed with
plant-derived ink.
The company's practice in the binding process is also eco-friendly. It
uses glue instead of wire for binding, which is safer and more
recyclable than conventional practices. Although eco-friendly binding
is limited in use in terms of the variety of papers and the number of
pages, Ohkawa Printing plans to promote it as much as possible,
depending on the printing purposes and forms, whether it be medical
manuals or brochures for cakes and snacks, even if they have to bear
the cost of promotion.
The company also delivers printed materials to customers in plastic
containers, instead of conventional cardboard boxes, in order to
reduce waste. For delivery, it uses vehicles powered by compressed
natural gas. Combined with a hybrid car for sales operations and the
supplementary use of the local car sharing system, the company has
reduced total CO2 emissions by about nine tons annually since it
started these efforts.
The company has been doing its best to use the materials and
technologies proposed under their Eco Line guidelines for all the
printing orders, after giving full consideration to the purposes and
nature of the each publication. Mr. Ohkawa says that the key to
promote the Eco Line depends on how well their sales staff can meet
client's printing requirements and at the same time understand their
environmental concern.
The company has also developed original products further integrating
the ideas of the Eco Line. One example is a desktop-type calendar,
called the "Separate Eco Calendar." It uses a binding comb made from
paper, 70 percent recycled paper for the mat board, recycled paper
containing bagasse for the calendar sheets, and soy ink for printing.
It can be set up easily by hand and provides enough space to write
notes. It was originally used as a sales promotion gift when sales
people visit their clients for New Year greetings, but improved every
year incorporating environmental considerations and universal design
as much as possible. Now this calendar is also sold as a sales
promotion product.
http://www.ohkawa-inc.co.jp/file/2_d_a_a.html (in
Japanese)
Another example is the "Happy Forests Calendar," launched this year.
This desktop calendar consists of a setting made of Japanese cypress,
cut in the process of forest management in a local forest in Kanagawa
Prefecture, and calendar sheets, VOC-free ink printed on FSC-certified
paper. It has the pleasant aroma of cypress.
http://www.ohkawa-inc.co.jp/file/2_d_c_a.html (Japanese only)
The 12 calendar sheets from January to December can be reused as
postcards. The company can also sell the calendar sheets for the
following year separately, so customers can reuse the wooden setting.
Also, one percent of the calendar sales is donated to a cause known as
"Nurturing Forest, the Water Source of Kanagawa" to contribute to
forest management.
If some people in Kanagawa Prefecture purchase this calendar, they can
not only contribute to green consumption, but also send postcards to
friends and feel connected to the forests that are a vital source of
the water people use every day. Buying this calendar every year gives
a sense of continuity. The company believes that offering this
calendar can bring people together with each other, as well as with
nature.
The company also thinks that printed materials such as the Happy
Forests Calendar can help connect people in various efforts, including
nature conservation and corporate social responsibility (CSR). In
order to be a sustainable printing company, Mr. Ohkawa believes it is
essential to come up with suggestions and make efforts to contribute
to establishing a sustainable society, in addition to meeting normal
business needs. Ohkawa Printing has already started these efforts, and
it will be interesting to see where the company goes from here.
(Staff writer Eriko Saijo)
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