A study by Heidelberger
Druckmaschinen AG () confirms that 40
percent of printshops place great value on environmental protection, a message has promoted
for 15 years.
made environmental protection
one of its corporate objectives back in 1992. The company was the first to
receive the industry’s eco-certificate for its foundry in Amstetten in 1996.
“We aim to make printing more
environmentally friendly and to ensure that the public is aware of this fact,”
says Dr. Jürgen Rautert, Director for Engineering and Manufacturing at . “However, the
focus now is on minimizing the presses’ environmental impact when in use at
customers’ sites. Therefore our developers are currently working on concepts
that will keep environmental pollution in printshops to a bare minimum. Our
network also
provides support for the implementation of appropriate production methods.”
If customers implement all the
measures suggested by
for environmentally-friendly production, numerous reductions can be achieved,
according to Rautert. CO2 emissions generated by material consumption and
printing processes can be reduced by over five percent, paper waste by up to 80
percent, energy consumption by more than 15 percent and waste by up to five
percent. For the Speedmaster XL105-6+L, these reductions are equivalent to
total annual savings of around EUR 210,000 — without even factoring into the
calculation the savings made on the press through shorter makeready times.