Sustainability
3m sustainability work is framed as a practical material review. A cleaner material path should reduce preventable waste, improve documentation discipline, and make substitution choices easier to explain to customers, regulators, and internal approval teams.
Dashboard
Sustainability language becomes credible only when it is tied to measurable operating facts. A tape that reduces rework may lower scrap even if its unit price is higher. A packaging component with recycled content may create risk if mechanical tolerance, color stability, or food-contact documentation is incomplete. A rubber seal with longer service life may prevent repeated maintenance visits and discarded parts. The dashboard approach helps teams compare those tradeoffs with evidence instead of treating sustainability as a separate marketing claim.
REACH, RoHS, Prop 65, FDA 21 CFR, or customer-specific declarations mapped to the market where the finished product will sell.
Material properties, processing notes, storage conditions, temperature range, and installation guidance that affect real application performance.
Clear record of why a product was selected, what incumbent it replaces, and what tests still need customer or internal approval.
Regulatory timeline
Identify whether the end product enters automotive, medical, food-contact, electronics, marine, or general industrial channels. This changes the evidence burden before samples move.
Compare performance and compliance impacts together. Replacing an adhesive, rubber tape, filler, or plastic film without this review can create retesting work later.
Ensure waste reduction, recycled content, longer life, or safer handling statements match the documents available to the buyer and customer.
Share the product family, target market, claim language, replacement goal, and required evidence. A structured file can prevent last-minute substitutions from creating waste, confusion, or customer approval delays.
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