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Schoeller Allibert: The next generation of foldable crates
The future of any sustainable supply chain
In Q4 last year, Schoeller Allibert appointed Ludo Gielen as CEO. Ludo had been with the company since 2004 as Chief Innovation Officer. Under his leadership, many new products have been introduced and Reusable Packaging News had the chance to discuss with him trends, challenges, and solutions, for returnable packaging (RTP) in the years to come.
Inventing and manufacturing reusable crates for the beverage industry since 1960, Schoeller Allibert, the European leader for returnable packaging has one of the strongest R & D teams in the industry and an international manufacturing footprint with a dedicated focus on innovation. In the last 24 months alone, Schoeller Allibert has developed and launched 42 successful new products for eight different end-markets, from new beer crates to foldable large and small containers. Sales of these new products have contributed significantly to revenue growth.
In 1992, Schoeller Allibert founded IFCO (International Food Container Organisation) and remained involved in the business until 2011. Today, the companies continue to work in partnership through an exclusive supply agreement for the third generation “Lift-Lock” container which serves more than 150 million fruit and vegetable customers.
What is next? Obviously, the innovation never stops.
The company won several awards in 2018 recognizing its commitment to innovation, including for the successful launch of the fourth generation ‘gold and silver’ beer crates with Warsteiner and for its next-generation large foldable container product lines: Excelsior®, Fructus® and Magnum Optimum®.
Schoeller Allibert’s engineers are currently focused on the development of the next generation of handheld containers for e-commerce solutions and products such as fruit and vegetables – the 4th generation of foldable small containers.
The new generation will be ultra-flat, helping to save significant logistics costs during empty returns. They will also be lighter, easier to handle and capable of being equipped with smart tracking devices.
Ludo Gielen,
Schoeller Allibert CEO