Advertisement
HomeIndustry ReleasesOn Earth Day 2019, Team Bendix Celebrates

On Earth Day 2019, Team Bendix Celebrates

ELYRIA, Ohio — When visiting a Bendix (Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems, LLC. and Bendix Spicer Foundation Brake, LLC.) facility, you wouldn’t expect to see employees refashioning wood pallets and crates into coffee tables, wine racks or patio furniture.

But that’s exactly what you’ll find on Earth Day, if you visit the company’s Huntington, Indiana, campus. To mark the global event, employees at every Bendix location are participating in many activities like sustainability, including coloring contests for kids, tree plantings and guest presentations.

Earth Day, which was founded in 1970 and celebrated annually on April 22, celebrates the planet while recognizing the need to protect the environment. Though Bendix focuses on sustainability throughout the year, it commemorates Earth Day and Earth Week—immediately following Earth Day—with environmental events for employees in all of its locations. These activities are inspired by Bendix’s long-standing commitment to sustainability through eliminating waste, reducing energy consumption and remanufacturing.

“Earth Day is a time to celebrate our planet and recognize our responsibility to be a sustainable corporate citizen,” said Maria Gutierrez, Bendix director of corporate responsibility and sustainability. “Through a combination of company-led initiatives and employee engagement, we work year-round to pursue our goals of diverting waste, decreasing energy consumption, expanding our remanufacturing efforts and shrinking our carbon footprint. Earth Day and Earth Week serve as a reminder of what we have accomplished—and what we have left to do.”

To mark Earth Week, Bendix employees in all North American facilities are organizing and participating in environmentally-focused activities. For example, employees at headquarters in Elyria are orchestrating a plant giveaway. They are collecting household hazardous waste items, and holding a game to educate each other—in a fun and engaging manner—about the proper sorting of recyclables and waste.

Employees are also all-in at the Acuña, Mexico, operation, where they are volunteering for trash pickup through the Adopt A Highway program. The Bendix Spicer Foundation Brake (BSFB) plant in Bowling Green, Kentucky, is leading a “Quick Kaizen”—ideas for improvement session: Employees submit their energy-saving ideas to win prizes.

In recognition of the team member efforts, a collage will be posted onsite for all of the upcycling projects that employees have completed with the reuse of the site’s wooden crates and pallets. And at the Huntington campus, in addition to the carpentry happening there, the plant’s new Green Team—a group of employee volunteers are focused on zero-waste goals—is planting trees on the grounds.

Achieving Zero

Bendix strives every day to reach its goals for waste diversion and energy reduction. The company aligns its efforts to fully support the United Nations’ (UN) ambitious Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The SDGs were adopted by all UN member states in 2015 to promote prosperity while protecting the environment. As a global company and part of the international community, Bendix aims to positively contribute to all SDGs, with a focus on two in particular—SDG 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and SDG 13 (Climate Action)—through its long-standing corporate sustainability strategy.

To contribute to these SDGs, Bendix is focused on being 100 percent landfill-free by 2020. For 2019, the goal is to cut another 10 percent of its energy consumption and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from the 2014 baseline—by executing phase II of the energy-efficiency initiative ECCO2 (Efficient Cut of CO2).

Both goals are nearing: In 2018, Bendix moved closer to Zero Landfill by diverting 96 percent (over 25.5 million pounds) of material waste from landfill disposal. Over the last four years, the company has also saved more than 9 million kilowatt-hours. That translates to over $690,000 saved through implementing energy-efficiency projects.

Initial steps in the Zero Landfill strategy included the diversion of only industrial waste. Now, nine out of the 10 Bendix manufacturing facilities are industrial waste landfill-free. Efforts are now focused on reduction and diversion from landfill of all remaining waste streams, including general trash and cafeteria waste. The company continues to drive initiatives that will allow Bendix to reach the overall goal to be landfill-free by 2020.

Bendix’s Elyria headquarters is an example of the innovative solutions the company has implemented to advance its path to zero waste. A successful composting program that began in the site’s cafeteria in 2016, was expanded in 2018 to include the entire Elyria facility.

In addition, the Elyria Centralized Waste project, which was launched in June 2018, intends to dramatically reduce the amount of waste that is sent to landfills, by replacing deskside trash/recycling pickup with disposing of waste by employees into new centralized collection stations.

Elyria’s zero-waste program recently won a global award from the Knorr-Bremse Group, Bendix’s Munich, Germany-based parent company—making it a model for the rest of the 30,000 employees worldwide to deploy. Bendix team members directing the North American effort are also serving as the global lead for the Knorr-Bremse Group’s worldwide zero-waste initiative, helping to guide the company’s global actions for achieving the UN SDG 12.

Reducing Where It Counts

Along with waste diversion, Bendix has committed to international targets on climate protection. Bendix continues to invest in improving the energy efficiency of processes and facilities. These actions include energy audits to identify energy conservation projects, the use of renewable energy sources, logistics optimization, and programs for reducing the carbon footprint of products.

The company’s $690,000 and more than 9 million kilowatt-hours in energy savings over the last four years are due in large part to Bendix’s continued improvement of lighting efficiency, and focusing on the primary energy consumers, HVAC and compressed air. Bendix raised the percentage of efficient lighting at its locations from 58 percent in 2016 to 99 percent in 2018.

“Our waste diversion and energy conservation goals are possible due to the commitment of our employees, who strive to reduce waste in every aspect of their work,” Gutierrez said. “At Bendix, where sustainability is one of our core values, we believe every day should be treated like Earth Day. Together, we hope to not only reach our own sustainability goals, but to inspire others to find ways to be environmentally conscious in their lives and in their work.”

The Reman Way

Remanufacturing is another key part of the company’s strategy for conserving energy, raw materials and landfill space. In 2018, Bendix produced nearly 2.5 million remanufactured components across its broad product lines, saving 5,392 tons of raw materials. The remanufacturing effort was also responsible for reducing the company’s carbon footprint by 18,874 equivalent tons of CO2.

Bendix’s commitment to remanufacturing is just one reason why it is one of the first ambassador companies of the Manufactured Again Certification program from MERA—the Association for Sustainable Manufacturing. In its ambassador role, Bendix continues to educate buyers about remanufacturing, suppliers and performance expectations.

The Manufactured Again Certification program helps purchasers easily identify remanufactured goods with like-new quality and warranty coverage. The program also promotes environmental stewardship and remanufacturing as a leading example in the circular economy.

The Manufactured Again Certification program, which was launched in November 2016, is based on the internationally recognized quality management standards, ISO 9001 and IATF 16949. Where ISO 9001 can be used by any organization, large or small, in any industry, the supplemental IATF 16949 is one of the automotive industry’s most widely-used international quality standards.

To receive Manufactured Again Certification, remanufacturers are required to submit third-party evidence of conformance to the accepted quality standards. The Manufactured Again Verification Committee oversees the program and reviews all applications.

For over 40 years, Bendix has been a remanufacturing leader. Remanufactured components from Bendix include an always growing portfolio of brake shoes, air disc brakes, valves, air dryers, compressors and electronics.

About Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems, LLC.

Bendix Commercial Vehicle Systems, a member of the Knorr-Bremse Group, develops and supplies leading-edge active safety technologies, energy management solutions, air brake charging, and control systems and components under the Bendix brand name. Those are for medium- and heavy-duty trucks, tractors, trailers, buses and other commercial vehicles throughout North America. As an industry pioneer employing more than 3,200 people, Bendix delivers solutions for improved vehicle safety, performance and overall operating cost.

Contact Bendix at 800-AIR-BRAKE (800-247-2725) or visit bendix.com. Stay connected and informed through Bendix expert podcasts, blog posts, videos and other resources at knowledge-dock.com. Follow Bendix on Twitter at twitter.com/Bendix_CVS. brake-school.com

Advertisement

November 2024

Meet the 2024 Transportation Director of the Year, Craig Beaver, director of transportation at Beaverton School District in Oregon....
Advertisement

Buyer’s Guide 2024

Find the latest vehicle production data and budget reports, industry trends, and contact information for state, national and federal...
Advertisement

Poll

Does your operation provide staff with end of the year performance evaluations?
49 votes
VoteResults
Advertisement