Ceratizit wins environmental award

Ceratizit wins environmental award

Ceratizit has received an environmental award known as the Prix de l'Environnement 2023 from the Luxembourg industry association FEDIL for the process used to manufacture the carbide grades in the upGRADE family of cutting tools.

January 22, 2024

Ceratizit has received an environmental award known as the Prix de l'Environnement 2023 from the Luxembourg industry association FEDIL for the process used to manufacture the carbide grades in the upGRADE family of cutting tools.

The company said that by using secondary raw materials from an optimized recycling process, the carbide grades have a low carbon footprint, and achieve the high performance of a premium carbide grade.

"Mining ore containing tungsten already pays off starting at a content of 0.06%. This means that around 200 tons of ore have to be transported to obtain one ton of metallic tungsten, which requires a lot of energy," said Dr Ralph Useldinger, head of group analytics and fundamental R&D. "This is why Ceratizit only uses secondary raw materials from the zinc recycling process for the upGRADE grades to minimize the carbon footprint of the products."

UPGRADETop: From left to right, Dr Ralph Useldinger, Head of Group Analytics and Fundamental R&D. and Executive Board Member Frank Thomé. Above: The upGRADE cutting tool line won an environmental award." data-entity-type="file" data-entity-uuid="6dadaae5-b79a-4950-81ca-486e82b31502" height="325" src="/wp-content/uploads/legacy/inline-images/ASSET_upgrade_2.jpg" width="488" />


Low CO2 emissions
The zinc used to break up the carbide structures is reused, meaning that the process produces emissions almost exclusively as a result of the necessary electricity. However, Ceratizit can also score points in this area: "Since the beginning of 2023, we have only been purchasing green electricity from sustainable sources," said Frank Thomé, executive board member.

Thomé also said the tooling line's varieties play an important strategic role. "The upGRADE product family is an important component of our sustainability strategy. They prove that more sustainable carbide products are possible without having to compromise on performance."

Useldinger said that the company uses high-quality, meticulously sorted carbide scrap in the recycling process. "In zinc recycling," he said, "the structure of the tungsten carbide remains unchanged. This means that the quality I put in is the quality I get out."

Two carbide grades
The upGRADE product family currently features two carbide grades. CT-GS20Y for metalworking, which has already won the Best of Industry Award, and KLC20+ for knives, rods, and saw teeth for woodworking, which was presented at LIGNA in May.

They form the vanguard of a product portfolio that, according to Thomé, is set to become increasingly sustainable in the coming years: "Our goal is to be the leader in sustainability in the cemented carbide and cutting tool industry by 2025. That's why we are not only actively working to further reduce our corporate carbon footprint, but are also gradually adding more products with a particularly low product carbon footprint to our product portfolio."

Glossary terms in this article

  • carbide
    Compound of carbon and one or more metallic elements. For cutting tools, tungsten carbide, titanium carbide, tantalum carbide or a combination of these in a cobalt or nickel matrix…