The Sustainable Green Printing Partnership (SGP), Sayville, N.Y., has released version 4.0 revised criteria of its sustainability certification, which was first established in 2008.
The new criteria, effective Jan. 1, 2022, maintains a focus on the three pillars—societal, economic, and environmental—through the development, implementation, and documentation of a robust sustainability management system (SMS) and series of best practices, according to the organization.
Revised every five years, SGP’s certification criteria establishes certified facilities as leaders in the sustainable supply chain for print and related supplies. The SGP Board of Directors approved version 4.0 which further streamlines the criteria, as well as includes provisions pushing the circular economy model. Criteria focus on validation and documentation of operational metrics help facilities contribute to their customers’ sustainability goals.
“This revision represents the program’s continued commitment to moving the sustainability needle in the print sector,” says Marci Kinter, SGP vice chair, Technical Committee and PRINTING United Alliance representative. “Now, facilities will be required to discuss possible end-of-life strategies with not only their supply base, but their customer base as well. It is our biggest step yet towards a circular economy model that offers clear documentation for leaders in the sustainable supply chain. Version 4.0 enhances its integration with the SGP Impact Tracker, the program’s sustainability dashboard, to promote standardized metric reporting to help print customers their print production as optimized for sustainability.”
The SGP certification criteria, in addition to the mandatory environmental, safety and health and energy audits, now requires a mandatory solid waste audit; increased emphasis on employment issues in the workplace; and a new management system requirement to review impacts of change in the facility.
SGP certification recognizes top sustainability leaders in the printing industry who complete the rigorous certification requirements and comprehensive facility audit evaluating the three areas of sustainability—people, planet and profit, according to the organization. For more information about the criteria, click here. — D.S.