The Ahlfeldt & Company GmbH print shop in Wiesbaden recently
started production operations with the first carbon-neutral
Speedmaster SM 52 Anicolor from Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
(Heidelberg). Some 62 metric tons of CO2 emissions were generated
during the manufacture of the five-color press with coating unit.
This was offset by investing in a certified climate protection
project in Vietnam. "We see printing as an integrated process that
starts with the manufacture of the press itself. It is impossible
for our day-to-day printing operations to be any more
environmentally friendly than they are with the Anicolor press,"
Production Manager Armin Ahlfeldt stated with enthusiasm. "We now
need only 20 sheets for makeready and the quality is simply
superb," he continues. Compared to traditional small-format offset
printing, the Anicolor inking unit cuts makeready times by almost
40 percent. What's more, eliminating ink zone setting also
makes job changes faster and reduces waste by up to 90 percent.
"Top-quality green printing isn't a contradiction in terms and
the Anicolor press has also got the economic balance right," says
Ahlfeldt.
Since it was founded in 2004, the Ahlfeldt & Company
print shop has positioned itself as an environmentally friendly
high-end business and systematically focused on combining
sustainability with environmental protection. The full-service
print shop employs eight staff and produces commercial products
such as flyers, mailings, brochures, and magazines. Ahlfeldt &
Company is FSC-certified (FSC = Forest Stewardship Council) and
obtains all its paper from a single supplier based in Europe to cut
down on transport. At the prepress stage, a Suprasetter A 75 images
chemical-free printing plates. And Saphira inks with low mineral
oil content are used in production. All the electricity required is
generated from hydroelectric power. Ahlfeldt & Company is one
of the 100 most environmentally friendly companies in the German
state of Hesse. It is the only FSC-certified print shop in
Wiesbaden and also the only one to offer certified climate-neutral
print production. "We work with a large number of regional and
national agencies and industrial customers who ask for products
that employ eco-friendly printing. The Anicolor press will win us
lots of new customers by enabling us to combine green printing with
top quality," explains Ahlfeldt.
The Anicolor press is integrated in the Prinect print shop
workflow and is part of a two-and-a-half-shift production
operation. Print runs vary between 20 and 400,000 sheets. Before
the end of the year, the print shop intends to produce 14 million
prints. This corresponds to between 300 and 400 metric tons of
paper and 13,000 printing plates. "Our strengths are flexibility
and the ability to respond quickly to customer requirements. Our
aim is to continue growing, and we can hardly wait to see, which
solutions Heidelberg will offer us at drupa. Our aim is to continue
growing and also to move in the direction of digital printing and
personalization in the future," concludes Ahlfeldt.
Heidelberg the only supplier to provide accurate details of CO2
emissions during press manufacture
An increasing number of print shops are keen to operate
carbon-neutral presses. Heidelberg has joined forces with Darmstadt
University of Technology to develop a method for determining the
carbon footprint of all its press series. The two key questions are
how much CO2 is generated by the materials used in the press and
how much by the energy consumed during production?
The parts list forms the basis for the material assessment
and includes all the parts required to build a press. It is very
comprehensive, with around 70,000 components, and indicates the
metals and other materials the parts are made from and their
weight. The GaBi database developed by PE International (GaBi =
life cycle assessment) is used to determine the carbon footprint of
these components. It includes the CO2 emissions generated during
the manufacture and transport of each material.
The amount of direct (production-related) energy required
during operations such as grinding, turning, milling, hardening,
and coating components is taken into account in the assessment, as
is the indirect energy required for lighting, heating, and cooling
the production halls. This data can be obtained and assigned based
on the recorded energy consumption for the individual halls, the
number of components produced in each one, and the scheduled times
for the production processes in conjunction with the relevant
energy indices.
Figure:
Armin Ahlfeldt (right) and Ralf Anschlag from Heidelberg
Vertrieb in front of the Speedmaster SM 52 Anicolor, the press that
proves top-quality green printing is not a contradiction in terms.
This carbon-neutral machine recently started production at the
Ahlfeldt & Company GmbH print shop in Wiesbaden.
Figure: Inking unit diagram
The Anicolor inking unit cuts makeready times by nearly
40 percent. What's more, eliminating ink zone setting also
makes job changes faster and reduces waste by up to 90 percent.
Further information about the Ahlfeldt print shop is
available at:
www.ahlfeldt-company.com
For further photos or information about Heidelberger
Druckmaschinen AG, please visit our Press Lounge at
www.heidelberg.com.
Further information for journalists:
Heidelberger Druckmaschinen AG
Corporate Public Relations
Hilde Weisser
Phone: +49 (0)6221 92 5066
Fax: +49 (0)6221 92 5069
E-mail:
hilde.weisser@heidelberg.com