As one of the world's leading manufacturers of sweet-smelling cosmetics, L'Oreal is hardly the first company you would associate with manure, but that could be about to change for one of the company's factories in Belgium.
Later this summer, the Libramont plant, which mainly produces haircare products, will complete work on an anaerobic digestion system that aims to capture methane from waste biomass and burn it to generate electricity and heat for the site.
Speaking to BusinessGreen.com, Pierre Simoncelli, director for sustainable development at the company, said that the factory was situated in a cattle-farming area that would provide the slurry to power the new technology.
"We plan to start by using a mixture of organic waste and corn, but we should then be able to switch fairly quickly to just using organic waste," he explained, adding that the biomass power system should provide enough energy for 85 per cent of the factories' current requirements.
The project is part of a major new environmental push from the beauty giant, which saw it announce yesterday that it would cut carbon emissions from its factories and warehouses by 50 per cent on 2005 levels by 2015, while also halving water use and waste generation per unit of finished product.
Simoncelli said that in order to meet the carbon target, the company would focus on accelerating the rollout of onsite renewable energy technologies and increasing the amount of energy it sources from green suppliers.
"We already have programmes in place to save energy and deploy PV or solar thermal technology at all our new facilities," he added. "We will continue with those and also have plans in place to buy more green energy where possible, particularly in the US."
The company has opted to set relative rather than absolute targets for waste and water as significant progress has already been achieved in both areas, Simoncelli said.
He added that the company would not have been able to cut total water use by 50 per cent by 2015, but would aim to deliver savings in the region of 30 to 35 per cent through wider rollout of rainwater-capturing systems and the use of steam-cleaning technologies.
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