From toothpaste and shampoo to detergents and lotions, Home and Personal Care (HPC) products are part of daily life for billions of people. As demand grows and sustainability expectations rise, GEA's NEXUS approach helps HPC manufacturers rethink production: holistically, efficiently, and with the future in mind.
Every morning starts with a routine. Brushing teeth, washing hair, applying lotion: small, everyday actions repeated across the globe. Behind these familiar products lies a highly dynamic industry. Home and Personal Care (HPC) manufacturers operate in a world of fast-changing consumer preferences, stricter regulations, and increasing pressure to reduce environmental impact. Producing more (and more diverse) products while using fewer resources has become one of the sector’s defining challenges.
For GEA, this challenge goes to the heart of its purpose: engineering for a better world. In HPC, that purpose translates into helping customers deliver the products people rely on every day, while cutting energy use, water consumption, and emissions. It is exactly where GEA NEXUS comes in.
Falko Fließbach
Global Sales & Application Design, Home and Personal Care at GEA
This is where GEA’s NEXUS approach makes a difference. Rather than optimizing single pieces of equipment in isolation, we look at the entire production system: processes, utilities, energy, water, and heat recovery, as one connected whole.
“Traditionally, factories were designed step by step,” explains George Shepherd, Global Technical Sustainability Manager at GEA. “The process came first; utilities were added later, and sustainability was often an afterthought. With NEXUS, we turn that logic around. We ask from the very beginning: how can this plant work as an integrated system with the lowest possible environmental footprint?”
Jacek Ławecki
Senior Process Engineer at GEA
Starting with a blank sheet of paper makes holistic optimization easier, but most factories are not built from scratch. In reality, the majority of sustainability projects happen in existing plants.
With NEXUS, even gradual changes can make a difference: lowering process temperatures, integrating heat recovery, or introducing heat pumps step by step. Many customers start with one line or one site, prove the concept, and then scale it across their network.
George Shepherd
Global Technical Sustainability Manager at GEA
One of GEA’s strengths is its broad industrial footprint. Experiences from food, beverage, or pharmaceutical projects feed directly into solutions for HPC. To make this exchange easier, GEA is bringing process and utility expertise even closer together within its organization.
Dr. Isabel Osterroth
Team Lead of NEXUS at GEA
For HPC manufacturers, the pressure to act will only increase. Consumers will continue to demand responsible products. Regulators will tighten standards. Investors will look for credible transition plans. In this environment, choosing the right partners matters.
“Our customers have made commitments to the market and to their shareholders,” Falko Fließbach says. “With GEA, they have a partner who can help turn those commitments into reality, combining deep process and utilities knowledge with a holistic sustainability approach.”
That partnership mindset reflects GEA’s own ambitions. By helping customers reduce emissions, GEA also advances its own climate targets. Engineering for a better world, in this sense, is a shared journey.
As billions of people go through their daily routines tomorrow morning, the products they use will feel just as familiar. But behind the scenes, the way those products are made is changing. With our holistic engineering approach, GEA NEXUS is helping HPC manufacturers ensure that everyday comfort comes with a lighter footprint, today and for generations to come.
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