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Sustainability

Electronic shelf labels reduce material waste, energy use, and labor-related emissions in retail. Below is a transparent breakdown of where the sustainability gains come from, the math behind them, and the limits of what we can claim. We've avoided greenwashing language in favor of source-cited numbers you can verify.

Where the gains come from

Replacing paper price tags with ESLs reduces environmental impact in three primary ways:

  1. Eliminated paper consumption — every printed price tag is replaced once. ESLs replace tags hundreds of times over their lifetime.
  2. Eliminated thermal printing — thermal label printers consume ribbon, paper, and energy. Multiplied across SKUs and stores, the totals add up quickly.
  3. Reduced labor-driven emissions — store staff no longer drive between aisles printing and replacing tags during promotional cycles. Indirect, but measurable at chain scale.

The math: paper-tag elimination, per-store

For a typical US grocery store with 30,000 SKUs and an average of 1.5 price changes per SKU per week:

SKUs per store: 30,000
Avg price changes per SKU per week: 1.5
Paper tags printed per week: 30,000 × 1.5 = 45,000
Tags per year (52 weeks): 45,000 × 52 = 2,340,000
Paper weight per tag: ~0.5 g (3" × 1.25" thermal label)
Total paper per store per year: 2,340,000 × 0.5 g = 1,170 kg ≈ 2,580 lbs
Result: 2,580 lbs of paper per store per year, eliminated.

Multiply by an ESL hardware lifespan of 7-10 years and a chain of any meaningful size and the totals are substantial. A 50-store chain over a 10-year ESL lifecycle eliminates roughly 1.3 million lbs (590 metric tons) of paper.

Honest counterpoint: ESL hardware itself is manufactured (extracting plastics, lithium, electronics components) and shipped (carbon footprint of ocean + truck transport from manufacturing in China to US distribution). At a chain scale, the lifecycle math still favors ESLs significantly — but the answer is "ESLs are net-positive over 5-10 year lifecycles," not "ESLs are zero-impact."

~2,580 lbs
Paper eliminated per store per year (30k-SKU grocery)
7–10 yr
Typical ESL hardware service life before battery replacement
~1.3M lbs
Cumulative paper eliminated, 50-store chain over 10 years

Battery + hardware end-of-life

Each ESL contains a coin-cell lithium battery that lasts 7-10 years. At end of life, the battery is replaceable — the rest of the ESL hardware can continue operating with a fresh battery. This is the typical service path for retailers; full hardware replacement happens roughly every 10-15 years.

How to recycle responsibly in the US

  • Coin-cell batteries: US battery recycling is standardized through Call2Recycle (call2recycle.org) drop-off locations — Home Depot, Lowe's, and most municipal recycling centers accept lithium coin cells at no cost.
  • ESL housings (plastic + electronics): qualify as e-waste under most US state programs. Best Buy, Staples, and certified e-waste recyclers handle ESLs the same as small consumer electronics.
  • Bulk decommissioning: for large chains retiring hundreds or thousands of ESLs at once, work with a US-based certified e-waste partner (R2 or e-Stewards certified). We can recommend regional partners on request.

Materials & certifications

ESLs are subject to the same hardware compliance standards as other small electronics. The relevant ones for US deployment:

  • RoHS (Restriction of Hazardous Substances) — restricts lead, mercury, cadmium. EU mandate; required by most US enterprise procurement.
  • REACH — EU chemical safety regulation. Often required for US enterprise sustainability scorecards.
  • FCC Part 15 — US RF emissions compliance. All ESLs sold in the US carry an FCC ID.

For specific compliance documentation, see the certifications page.

What we don't claim

We don't have a third-party sustainability rating like EcoVadis. We don't have a science-based emissions reduction target. We're a US distributor of hardware made elsewhere — those are claims more meaningfully made by the manufacturer (ZKong) and the broader e-paper supply chain. What we can offer is:

  • Honest transparency about the math above
  • Recyclable end-of-life path through standard US infrastructure
  • Hardware that operates 5-15× longer than the paper tags it replaces

Need sustainability data for an enterprise RFP?

If you're putting together a vendor sustainability scorecard for procurement, we can provide hardware compliance documentation (RoHS, REACH, FCC) and supplier-level sustainability data on request.

Request RFP documentation →

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