Lifecycle Thinking
Circularity & Resource Efficiency
Keeping materials and value in use for longer.
We apply lifecycle thinking to raw materials, packaging, product use and responsible end-of-life pathways—without compromising performance, quality or safety.
What It Means
A practical, open approach
For lubricants, circularity is complex: formulations must meet demanding specifications, used-oil quality varies, and collection infrastructure differs by market. So we focus on where we have direct control, where we can influence partners, and where wider infrastructure is required.
The Model
Our circularity loop
An open loop — a repeated decision process, not a claim that all materials currently circulate in a closed system.
Open circularity loop with six actions: Reduce, Replace, Reuse, Recycle, Recover and Improve, centred on product performance, integrity and safety. The loop represents direction, not current universal capability.
Performance, integrity and safety remain essential at every stage.
- 01 · Reduce
Reduce
Accurate formulation, production control and packaging design reduce avoidable loss and material demand.
- 02 · Replace
Replace
Evaluate circular or renewable inputs where quality, safety, traceability and performance can be demonstrated.
- 03 · Reuse
Reuse
Consider returnable, refillable or bulk formats where cleanliness and product integrity can be controlled.
- 04 · Recycle
Recycle
Design and specify packaging with local recycling systems and recycled content in mind.
- 05 · Recover
Recover
Support used-oil and packaging recovery through authorised contractors and market collection systems.
- 06 · Improve
Improve
Measure outcomes, learn from pilots and strengthen the next design decision.
Packaging
Packaging direction
Establish a baseline
Measure packaging material by substrate, format, weight, market and annual volume.
Reduce material
Review pack geometry, wall thickness and secondary packaging through validated trials.
Circular content
Evaluate post-consumer recycled content and recycled steel with chain-of-custody evidence.
Reusable formats
Assess drums, IBCs and bulk supply subject to cleaning, traceability and quality controls.
Packaging must always protect the lubricant from contamination, leakage and degradation; a lighter or recyclable pack is only meaningful where it preserves integrity and local systems exist.
Used oil responsibility
Used oil is a controlled waste stream and must be handled through authorised channels — recovered for re-refining, energy recovery or approved treatment depending on contamination and local regulation. It must never be discharged to soil, drains, sewers or water.
Re-refined & circular inputs
Re-refined base oils can return recovered resources to productive use. We are evaluating future circular inputs where supply, traceability and performance can be demonstrated — with product claims made only for verified formulations.
Talk To Us
Responsible lifecycle management
No single company controls the full lubricant lifecycle. Discuss packaging formats, bulk supply, product selection, used-oil guidance or future circular opportunities with our team.