Close×

Flint Group, including all business units within its Packaging and its Commercial Publication & Web divisions, has achieved a Silver status from business sustainability ratings provider EcoVadis.

The company was  in the top 21 per cent of companies in the manufacture of paints, varnishes and similar coatings, including printing inks, rated by EcoVadis . It was rated in the top 9 per cent of companies in the Sustainable Procurement category, and in the top 7 per cent for Ethics.

Steve Dryden, CEO for Flint Group, said: “This is a tremendous achievement for our business around the world. It reflects the hard work and commitment our teams are making in driving toward our 2030 sustainability vision - to be recognised by our customers, employees, and shareholders as an ethical company, supplying sustainable products and services to the packaging and printing industries. This vision supports long-term value creation and growth for our customers, employees, and shareholders.”

Flint Group says it employs a diligent sustainability framework, covering ecological, social, and governance aspects of the business’ activities and, in 2020, became a signatory to the United Nations Global Compact. It says this commitment aligns the company’s operations with the UN’s universal principles on human rights, labour, the environment and anti-corruption, in addition to the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

Doug Aldred, chief commercial officer for Flint Group, said: “EcoVadis provides the leading solution for monitoring sustainability in global supply chains. The business uses its innovative technology and sustainability expertise to support Flint Group in adopting sustainable practices, and we were delighted to secure Silver status; a 10-point improvement over our 2020 score.”

Food & Drink Business

Australia’s national science agency has proposed cutting up to 52 net roles from its Agriculture and Food division and exiting food ingredient innovation, precision fermentation, microbial technologies, and its national food innovation network – changes the food tech sector says leave a significant gap.

The NZ$307 million sale of the Pōkeno facility to Abbott is complete, delivering a material debt reduction for the Canterbury dairy processor – but significant refinancing pressures remain as the company pursues its Stabilise, Simplify, Scale recovery plan.

Pure Foods Tasmania has entered a binding agreement to acquire the assets of Brilliant Food Australia, a premium seafood brand. The $300,000 deal adds the brand to the Woodbridge Smokehouse stable and lifts PFT’s revenue base by approximately 24 per cent.