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Envalior Launches “Envalior CARES” to Advance Sustainability Across Materials Industry

Maílis Carrilho
Written by Maílis Carrilho
Updated on October 14th, 2025
Maílis Carrilho
Edited by Maílis Carrilho
5 min read
Published Oct 14, 2025

Within the “Low Carbon” pillar, Envalior has set a new emissions baseline using 2024 data and established an ambitious goal to cut Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by 35 percent by 2030. The company also plans to source 100 percent renewable electricity across its global operations by the end of the decade. The program is structured around three core pillars:

  1. Low Carbon: reducing direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions;

  2. Sustainable Resources: advancing circular and bio-based materials;

  3. Social Responsibility: promoting safety, inclusion, and corporate ethics.

Through this framework, Envalior aims to align its operations and innovation roadmap with international net-zero targets and industry-wide expectations for transparency and accountability.

Emissions Reduction and Energy Transition

Within the “Low Carbon” pillar, Envalior has set a new emissions baseline using 2024 data and established an ambitious goal to cut Scope 1 and Scope 2 emissions by 35 percent by 2030. The company also plans to source 100 percent renewable electricity across its global operations by the end of the decade.

Key actions include:

  • Transitioning to electric steam generation to replace conventional boilers;

  • Expanding ISO 50001 and ISO 14001 energy and environmental management systems;

  • Phasing in low-carbon heat technologies across production sites;

  • Implementing efficiency upgrades to reduce process emissions and energy intensity.

Envalior also plans to expand its reporting boundaries to include Scope 3 emissions, covering supply chain, transport, and product lifecycle impacts, reflecting a more complete understanding of its carbon footprint.

Sustainable Materials and Circular Innovation

The second pillar, “Sustainable Resources”, focuses on developing advanced materials that combine performance with lower environmental impact. Envalior is investing in bio-based and recycled-content polymers that serve as “drop-in” alternatives, allowing customers to transition to sustainable materials without redesigning production systems.

Recent innovations include new product lines within the Durethan and Stanyl families, which use certified renewable or recycled feedstocks and deliver up to 50 percent lower carbon footprints compared to fossil-based equivalents.
These materials are already being adopted in applications across automotive, electronics, and consumer goods, where lightweighting and durability remain key requirements.

By emphasizing certified circular inputs and transparent mass-balance accounting, Envalior’s materials strategy supports customers pursuing carbon-neutral or circular manufacturing pathways. The company plans to showcase further innovations in this space at major industry events in 2025, underscoring its intent to link material science directly to climate goals.

Governance, Reporting, and Social Responsibility

Under the “Social Responsibility” pillar, Envalior has reinforced its commitments to health, safety, diversity, and ethical business conduct.
The company is implementing global standards for workplace safety, human rights, and environmental responsibility, as well as measures to prevent plastic pellet loss in its production and logistics chain, a key issue in mitigating microplastic pollution.

Envalior’s first Sustainability Report, published in 2024, details performance across key ESG indicators such as energy use, safety, emissions, and community engagement. The report is based on a Double Materiality Assessment, which evaluates both the company’s environmental impact and the potential risks posed by climate change and resource constraints to its operations.

The report is designed to align progressively with the European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) and the UN Global Compact principles, setting the foundation for future transparency and accountability.
By committing to recognized global initiatives and publishing detailed disclosures, Envalior aims to position itself as a credible partner in the materials sector’s low-carbon transformation.

Sector Implications and Challenges

Envalior’s roadmap exemplifies a broader evolution in the materials and chemicals industries, as producers face mounting pressure to decarbonize and adopt circular models.
The company’s commitments point to several trends with sector-wide relevance:

  1. Supply chain collaboration is essential.
    OEMs and downstream manufacturers increasingly require verified, low-carbon materials. By investing in certified feedstocks and traceable value chains, Envalior is reducing the complexity of decarbonization for its customers.

  2. Transparency and disclosure are becoming regulatory priorities.
    European and international frameworks are pushing firms to provide granular ESG data. Companies that act early, backed by independent assurance and standardized metrics, gain reputational and operational advantages.

  3. Operational decarbonization demands scale and innovation.
    Electrification of heat, renewable energy procurement, and energy efficiency upgrades will be vital to achieving meaningful reductions in industrial emissions.

  4. Scope 3 remains the hardest frontier.
    Addressing value-chain emissions requires collaboration beyond corporate boundaries, engaging suppliers, logistics partners, and recyclers to reduce lifecycle impacts.

  5. Credibility depends on measurable outcomes.
    As scrutiny over “greenwashing” grows, success will depend on the ability to demonstrate verified progress. Envalior’s focus on third-party certification and transparent reporting provides a solid foundation, though consistent execution will determine long-term credibility.

The Road Ahead

For Envalior and other industry players, sustainability is no longer an add-on; it is a strategic imperative.
The “Envalior CARES” framework reflects a pragmatic approach: combining operational decarbonization, materials innovation, and social governance into one integrated system.

As the materials sector confronts the twin challenges of competitiveness and climate responsibility, frameworks like this one may define how companies navigate the path to net zero, balancing profitability, transparency, and environmental stewardship.

Source: plasticstoday.com


Maílis Carrilho
Written by:
Maílis Carrilho
Sustainability Research Analyst
Maílis Carrilho is a Sustainability Research Analyst (Intern) at Net Zero Compare, contributing research and analysis on climate tech, carbon policies, and sustainable solutions. She supports the team in developing fact-based content and insights to help companies and readers navigate the evolving sustainability landscape.
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