Invest in (digital) innovation to grow
40 years in the flexible, cutting-edge and sustainable packaging: and today Nuova Erreplast is able to even support start-ups with small volumes.
Specialized in the production of customized flexible packaging, the Campania-based company Nuova Erreplast has studied and developed suitable solutions to satisfy a constantly evolving market, starting from the possibility of creating short and advantageous runs in many aspects: this need was felt both by start-ups and by companies interested in targeted marketing actions or by major international brands.
Thanks to a constant policy of investments in technology, today it combines traditional flexographic printing with digital printing, obtaining revolutionary results compared to the past. We speak, for example, of packaging printed with water-sustainable inks even in limited runs, thus excluding the need to invest in printing systems.
In this regard, a reminder that the customers of the southern Italian converter can take advantage of the support of its internal graphics office to create packaging with an attractive format and design, thus effectively communicating the brand values.
Since the future of Nuova Erreplast can be summarized in the keywords “research, attention to the environment and the human factor”, the company is directing its production towards flexible packaging made with sustainable and recyclable high barrier plastic material, capable of preserving the organoleptic characteristics of the product contained and in full compliance with the law: the Company Management Systems are in fact certified in compliance with the ISO 9001: 2015, ISO 14001: 2015 and BRC-IOP standards.
Faithful to the ethics of sustainability and adopting the paradigms of Industry 4.0, Nuova Erreplast has installed a hot-gas by pass recovery system and has invested in post-combustion solvent abatement systems, in green energy as well as in raw materials and accessories more sustainable.
An example of this is the shoppers produced with bio-based materials - which derive from renewable sources such as corn starch and sugar cane - available in the stores of large customers.