Creator of the world’s best-selling range of brass instruments in plastic scores UK first

Warwick Music Group, which developed the world’s first plastic brass instruments, has become the first UK music instrument manufacturer to be certified as carbon neutral.

It has received the designation for its full range of brass instruments – produced in colourful recyclable ABS plastic – from sustainability assessor and independent validator Carbon Footprint.

The company – winner of the Queen’s Award for Enterprise for its innovation of its first instrument in plastic pBone – is now the world’s largest producer of brass instruments manufactured in ABS plastic.

It is a significant boost for the UK West Midlands Export Champion that has faced the stigma and ‘bad press’ widely associated with plastic – but which has received numerous plaudits for its innovations and for helping increase the number of brass players worldwide.

“Our goal has always been to make the joy of music accessible and fun. We chose to produce in plastic because it offers so many advantages over conventional methods. Not all plastic is bad plastic – we chose ABS because it is widely and easily recycled, is lightweight, has high tensile strength and scratch resistance. It is also available in a multitude of bright colours – but no matter the colour of the instrument, players and teachers can now be assured that our instruments are also the ‘green’ choice,” said Chris Fower, director of creativity and innovation at Warwick Music Group based just outside Tamworth, Staffordshire.

Philip Law, director general of the British Plastics Federation, which represents the UK plastics industry and is working on a range of sustainability initiatives, congratulated Warwick Music Group on its achievement.

He said: “Warwick Music Group is pioneering innovation and with this verification has demonstrated the superior sustainability credentials of plastic and the very important role it plays in our daily lives. This is a great example of how economically recyclable plastics can be an environmentally friendly alternative to traditional materials.

Since first going on sale in late 2010, more than half a million of Warwick Music Group’s instruments have been sold with pBone becoming the largest-selling trombone worldwide.

Fower added: “As manufacturers of instruments in plastic, we bear an even greater responsibility because, unlike the makers of traditional brass instruments who cannot readily change the way they manufacture, it is so much easier for us to be sustainable and make greener choices for our planet, by building in that requirement from the outset. Our instruments are not just brass instruments made in plastic, they are designed from the outset as plastic instruments.

“We have invested in our manufacturing processes to ensure that environmental considerations are built into our instruments, improved our distribution chain and introduced low-impact packaging. Our instruments provide great advantages but are also the sustainable-choice comparing favourably with traditional instruments that use more energy in their production as well as materials such as zinc where reserves are expected to last for less than two decades and only 30% comes from recycling.”

Now the company is focused on reducing its CO2 emissions by changing the material for its instrument bags to a more sustainable fabric and using more efficient forms of transportation.

It has also embarked on supporting carbon offset projects in the Sudan and Kenya.

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