Two decades ago, the term “information highway” was the buzz word of businesses around the world as they looked for ways to increase communication, reach more customers, and increase efficiency and knowledge by using the internet to its fullest. Now the new buzzword seems to be “sustainable manufacturing.”
Sustainable manufacturing is a step beyond “going green.” It’s not just recycling, reducing, and reusing products, it’s the ability to completely eliminate negative environmental impacts by designing products in a skillful way and addressing environmental concerns from the manufacturing of that product, all the way to the end of the product’s life span. And it applies to everything from objects used every day like a laptop or pen, to skyscrapers and airplane design. Sustainable manufacturing takes into account human population growth, environmental crises, ecosystems, and the depletion of natural resources along with the byproducts (some harmful) created during the manufacturing or recycling process.
It’s this type of conceptual thinking put into real life manufacturing applications that can make a significant impact on the reduction of natural resource depletion, better air and water quality, fewer landfills, less pollution, and much more. Many companies are finding ways to produce products that last longer, are created without depleting or harming the environment, use renewable resources in the manufacturing of these products, and can then be recycled without harmful processes. They are even considering ways to reduce shipping and therefore the energy used and pollution caused by sending products overseas by planes or boats.
While ‘going green’ in general will make an impact on whether future generations have the resources we have, sustainable manufacturing can make a global impact as well.




