Leadership pillar

Supply chain & Waste prevention

Unfortunately, wine cannot flow directly from the barrel to your glass. It takes a lot of materials and packaging to get that elegant wine bottle to your table. Just like at home, we want to make sure wineries and vineyards are recycling and composting everything they can. Napa Green connects members with local recycling companies to get them free staff trainings, signs, and bins to ensure glass, cardboard, plastic wrap, corks, landscaping, food waste all get recycled or composted into another purpose. The goal is over 75% diversion – meaning less than 25% of “waste” ends up in the landfill.

Wineries have significant purchasing power, and Napa Green works with members to help them green their supply chain and shift to environmentally preferable products. One hot topic right now is how to Lighten Up! Bigger and heavier bottles do not mean better wine, but they do cost more, weigh more, and take up more space, which increases shipments and emissions that contribute to climate change. Currently, only 25-30% of glass bottles get recycled in the U.S. There are new initiatives like The Good Goods and Conscious Container working on bottle takeback, cleaning and return – bringing bottles full circle.

Here are some examples of how sustainable wineries and vineyards prevent waste and buy “green”:

  • Use washable glasses and dishware in the tasting room and at events
  • Eliminate the use of Styrofoam, which is almost never recycled, lasts forever, and leaches toxic materials
  • Use shipping materials made from recycled content, which can be recycled or composted
  • Shift over to Elegant Light or even Wild glass, which has the significant added benefit of reducing the winery’s carbon footprint
  • Buy green, low-toxicity and biodegradable cleaning products
  • Buy copy/printer paper and janitorial products with Post-Consumer recycled content
  • Eliminate the use of bottled water, which has a huge carbon footprint, is often less healthy, and the low-grade plastic is rarely recycled, ending up on our streets and in our oceans
  • Use natural cork, which comes from infinitely renewable cork trees, and can be recycled into soles, purses and more

Supply chain & Waste prevention musings

Natural Cork is a Win for Planet and People
Natural cork is the most sustainable wine closure. Did you know that cork is made from the bark of cork oak trees? The bark cannot be harvested until the oak tree is 25 years old, and is then harvested every nine years, using ancient harvesting techniques. The bark harvest actually prolongs the life of the trees, which can live from 100 to 300 years.
Lighten Up – the Benefits of Lighter Packaging
Packaging plays an important role in customer perception. We are hearing more and more stories from Napa Green members about the benefits of greener packaging AND customers giving kudos for eliminating Styrofoam and lightening packages.
ZD Wines Thinks Green
ZD Wines was recently certified as a Napa Green Winery. “It’s the way we think anyway – the way we do everything,” said CEO Robert deLeuze, son of founder Norman deLeuze, about the straightforward process to becoming certified.