PPG Recognized as John Deere Supplier of the Year
Posted on Tuesday, April 1, 2014
Pittsburghbased
PPG
Industries’
industrial
coatings
business has earned recognition as
the Enterprise Indirect Material and
Services (IM&S) “Supplier of the
Year“ in the John Deere Achieving
Excellence Program. PPG was also
awarded Partner-level status for 2013.
“Supplier of the Year” is Deere
& Company’s highest recognition.
PPG was selected for the honor in
appreciation of its dedication to
providing products and services
of outstanding quality, its riskminimizing
Secure Launch
Excellence™ process and its
commitment to continuous
improvement. Courtney Jungjohann
Deemer, Scott Leis, John Meincke,
Kevin Braun and Chancey Hagerty
accepted the recognition during
formal ceremonies in Moline, Ill.
PPG supplies electrocoat, liquid and
powder coatings, and pretreatment
chemicals to John Deere’s global
operations.
Suppliers who participate in the
Achieving Excellence program are
evaluated annually in several key
performance categories, including
quality, cost management, delivery,
technical support and wavelength,
which is a measure of responsiveness.
John Deere Supply Management
created the program in 1991 to
provide a supplier evaluation and
feedback process that promotes
continuous improvement.
In other PPG news, the U.S.
Department of Energy (DOE) was
awarded $224,000 to PPG to develop
a new class of pigments for cool
coatings.
The award is part of a $530,000
project that includes a $250,000 award
to the Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) to partner
with PPG on the research and $56,000
in cost-sharing by PPG.
While painting a metal roof white
is the simplest way to keep the sun’s
energy from heating a building’s
interior, most consumers will do so
only if the roof is flat. For sloped roofs,
they prefer darker coatings that absorb
more visible light, including many
that also absorb more invisible NIR
solar radiation. Because colors absorb
more solar energy as they get darker,
buildings with dark-colored roofs are
warmer and more expensive to cool
than buildings with white roofs.
To combat this problem, PPG
makes products such as Ultra-Cool®
coatings that reflect invisible NIR
radiation, but dark Ultra-Cool coatings
still absorb visible light energy that is
ultimately converted into heat.
The goal of the PPG/Berkeley Lab program is to develop
a more advanced class of dark-colored pigments that can
convert a portion of the absorbed visible light energy into
NIR energy that is radiated away from buildings.
How will this affect the powder coatings market? “We
have customers fabricating coil into roofing shingles and
spraying powder for special effects,” says Scott W. Moffatt,
market manager, Building Products, Industrial Coatings,
at PPG. “This DOE work could have some connections
with a few powder customers but IR reflectivity would
have to become bigger in the aluminum extrusion window
market.”
For more information, visit www.ppgindustrialcoatings.com or call 888-774-2001.