Employee Efforts Have Reduced Weight to Landfill Contributions by Nearly 22 Percent
ST. LOUIS, Nov. 14 /PRNewswire/ -- Anheuser-Busch announced today that
even with production increases, the weight of material it contributes to
community landfills from its 12 U.S. breweries has been reduced by nearly 22
percent (or approximately 2,400 tons) in 2008 compared to the same time frame
last year. All of this is part of the brewer's ongoing efforts to recycle the
solid waste associated with brewing and packaging its beers, to a rate of more
than 99 percent.
'Our employees are to be commended for their efforts to find ways to
recycle and reuse materials throughout our operations,' said Peter Kraemer,
vice president of operations for Anheuser-Busch, Inc. 'At each of our 12 U.S.
breweries, our people are looking for ways to use fewer materials and keep the
solid waste we do generate out of landfills. Their accomplishments are truly
making an impact, not only in our breweries, but in the communities in which
they live.'
Recycling at Anheuser-Busch is a tradition that began in the late 1800s
when the company first recycled brewers' grain into cattle feed. Among the
items reused and recycled at the breweries include: spent brewers' grain,
plastic strapping, stretch wrap, aluminum, glass, cardboard, plastics, office
paper, metals, pallets and beechwood chips. This amounted to nearly four
billion pounds of materials in 2007.
To help emphasize its recycling efforts, Anheuser-Busch has placed a print
ad in this week's editions of Sport Illustrated and U.S. News and World
Report. Featuring Fort Collins brewery employee Blair Everett, the ad notes
the company's long-standing environmental record.
Anheuser-Busch has also focused on reducing the amount of materials used
at its breweries. For example, the company has reduced aluminum can weight by
more than 40 percent since the 1970s. Employees are also encouraged to look
for ways to conserve energy, water and raw materials in daily operations at
the breweries and learn how to conserve energy and recycle at home through
environmental fairs and the company's annual 'Green Week,' a yearly tradition
dating back to 1990.
Anheuser-Busch is also expanding its use of alternative fuels and
announced earlier this year that more than five billion 12 oz. servings of
beer -- or the equivalent of about one in seven beers brewed by the company in
the United States -- are expected to be brewed using renewable fuel by the end
of 2009*, thanks to environmental efforts at the company's 12 U.S. breweries.
As a member of the U.S. EPA Climate Leaders Program, Anheuser-Busch has
committed to reduce total greenhouse gas emissions to 5 percent below 2005
levels by the year 2010 for all of its U.S. operations. Using EPA standards,
this reduction in total greenhouse gas emissions is the equivalent of taking
nearly 30,000 passenger vehicles off the road or heating more than 14,000
homes. In addition, the company has also committed to increasing the total
use of renewable fuel from 8 percent to 15 percent in the same time period.
Based in St. Louis, Anheuser-Busch is the leading American brewer, holding
a 48.5 percent share of U.S. beer sales. The company brews the world's
largest-selling beers, Budweiser and Bud Light. Anheuser-Busch also owns a 50
percent share in Grupo Modelo, Mexico's leading brewer, and a 27 percent share
in China brewer Tsingtao, whose namesake beer brand is the country's
best-selling premium beer. Anheuser-Busch ranked No. 1 overall and No. 1 in
social responsibility among beverage companies in FORTUNE Magazine's Most
Admired U.S. and Global Companies lists in 2008. Anheuser-Busch is one of the
largest theme park operators in the United States, is a major manufacturer of
aluminum cans and one of the world's largest recyclers of aluminum cans. For
more information, visit http://www.OurPledge.com.
* 'More than five billion 12-ounce servings' and 'about one in seven
beers brewed by Anheuser-Busch' are figures derived from taking the
company's U.S. beer production in 2007, converting it to equivalent
12-ounce servings and multiplying the figure by the estimated
percentage of renewable fuel the company plans to use at its U.S.
breweries in 2009.
SOURCE Anheuser-Busch