May 16, 2025
(Winnipeg Free Press)
–
A major manufacturer has a
Winnipeg
expansion underway that involves turning food into food packaging.
Winpak Ltd.
is adding 210,000 square feet to its Saulteaux Crescent facility. Once complete, the
US$100 million
expansion will house the production of recyclable packages.
Starch -- the byproduct of potato and pea protein processing -- is expected to be a shining star. By current plans, starch will be used to create packaging for pasta, lunch meat and a swath of other products.
"We're taking a product that's typically down-cycled, goes to a landfill, and turning it into a value-added product," said
James Holland
, president of Winpak Division (an arm of
Winpak Ltd.
) and
Winpak Films
.
Winpak
is part of a global packaging group and counts 13 North American manufacturing plants, its website reads.
PepsiCo, Nestlé and Walmart are on its customer list.
Winpak
products come in the form of Keurig pods and Cesar dog food tins.
Oliver Muggli
,
Winpak's
chief executive, said the new addition to the company's
Winnipeg
plant should be operational early next year.
The first line -- 65 metres long -- will focus on "recycle ready" materials. Meat, cheese and medical device packaging will be in the queue.
Muggli expects to ramp up operations on the central line over six years. Roughly
US$100 million
worth of material can be outputted at capacity, he said.
The site will have space for three lines.
Winpak
will ask board members for approval of the second line next year; realistically, the line will be added in 2027, Muggli said. A third line could arrive between 2027 and 2030.
"Eco-form" products will be made, using starches, on the second line.
"Starch, surprisingly, has very good oxygen barriers," Muggli said. "It's good for protecting food product from deterioration."
Manitoba
potato processing plants and Roquette, a pea protein business in
Portage la Prairie
, will be tapped for their starch byproduct, Muggli continued.
Winpak
hasn't yet sold packaging using its starch process. It's been developing procedures with the
National Research Council
for the past 11 years.
The new facility will have a space to showcase products to customers and a research and development area.
Muggli anticipates hiring 30 to 40 people per line. The lines are complicated and the jobs are "fairly sophisticated," he added.
Tariffs haven't affected the building's creation or
Winpak's
Winnipeg
operations. However, the company's
Quebec
plant has been hit -- it converts aluminum into items like yogurt lids before shipping such goods to
the United States
.
U.S.
President
Donald Trump
placed 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports in March.
Canada
reciprocated with levies of its own on
U.S.
steel and aluminum.
"It is, of course, an issue," Muggli said. "However, our competitors in the
U.S.
are facing the same tariffs, so it's kind of a level playing field."
Overall, the trade war is creating inflationary pressures that are passed to clients, who then pass those to
U.S.
consumers, Muggli relayed. He deemed 2024 a "very successful year."
Winpak
saw a 5.4 per cent year-over-year increase in its earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), reaching
US$240.8 million
. Its revenue,
US$1.13 billion
, decreased 0.9 per cent during the same time frame.
Winpak's
2024 annual report cited selling price and mix changes as change contributors.
Net income attributable to
Winpak
equity holders reached a record
$149.5 million
in 2024.
Uncertainty hovers, but as of right now, Muggli expects 2025 to be "another year of new records."
Winpak
marks its 50th anniversary in 2025.
Winnipeg
Mayor
Scott Gillingham
presented the company with a community service award at its annual shareholders meeting Thursday.
"Thank you for not just your investment today, but your commitment to building
Winnipeg
and our economy in the future," Gillingham said, adding a half-century in business "doesn't happen by accident."
Winpak
employs upwards of 1,000 people in
Winnipeg
.
Wihuri International Oy
, a Finnish conglomerate, is majority shareholder.
Earlier this week,
Winpak
celebrated its recent
$100,000
donation to the
Grace Hospital
. The health-care facility renamed its emergency department waiting area after
Winpak's
retiring board chairman,
Antti I. Aarnio-Wihuri
.
gabrielle.piche@winnipegfreepress.com
* All content is copyrighted by Industry Intelligence, or the original respective author or source. You may not recirculate, redistribute or publish the analysis and presentation included in the service without Industry Intelligence's prior written consent. Please review our terms of use.