Sonoco Donates $2.5-million to Clemson for Planned Institute
CLEMSON, S.C.—A $2.5-million gift will create a proposed new institute at Clemson University. Sonoco Products Company and Clemson officials announced that the donation launches the Sonoco Institute of Packaging Design and Graphics at Clemson University.
The gift from the Hartsville, S.C.-based global packaging leader forges a powerful learning and economic development resource for South Carolina.
The planned institute will provide resources for students of Clemson to enhance their opportunities for successful careers in packaging, printing and allied fields. Research work within the institute will fall into four broad categories: research, testing and product development; training; student and faculty projects; and short courses and special programs. The institute will promote consumer and environmentally superior packaging design development, printing-imaging technologies and printing-packaging systems to enhance the reusability, traceability and sustainability of paperboard, film and corrugated paperboard packages.
Packaging is a yearly $100-billion-plus business, based on gross sales figures, making it the third largest industry in the United States. More people work in packaging and packaging operations than any other business area in the nation.
“Sonoco has been a long-standing friend of Clemson,” said university President Jim Barker. “This gift creates an extraordinary investment in education, research and service to a high-tech industry.”
The funds will be used to help pay for construction of a facility to house components of the institute. Additionally, there are commitments of gifts-in-kind for technology support of the institute. Program leaders foresee the need for endowed chairs to teach and direct the momentum of the institute: two positions in packaging science and one in graphic communications. The institute will be self-sustaining with revenue derived from activities.
This gift is not Sonoco’s first to the university. In 1992 the company provided $500,000 for a laboratory that was dedicated as the Sonoco Packaging Science Laboratory in 1993.
“We understand the value of a research university partnership,” said Sonoco President and CEO Harris E. DeLoach Jr. “Preparing the next generation of packaging and graphics professionals is vital. Research drives change and we have to be able to change to compete more effectively. We are changing — changing the way the world sees packaging, changing the way the world sees us.”
Sonoco was founded in 1899 as the Southern Novelty Company. Its first product was a cone shaped paper yarn carrier. Today Sonoco provides industrial and consumer packaging solutions to customers in a wide array of industries in more than 300 operations on five continents.
Making the changes in the two departments will fall on Ron Thomas, packaging science department chairman, and Sam Ingram, graphic communications chairman. The programs have similar structures, relying on business advisory boards to guide curriculum, hands-on laboratory experience and internships. Both departments have nearly 100 percent job placement among their graduates.
“Needs drive change,” said Thomas. “Packaging technology is evolving rapidly, and Clemson is in the midst of that evolution. Clemson is the only university in the Southeast, and one of only four in the nation, that offers a four-year program leading to a Bachelor of Science degree in packaging science.”
Ingram agrees that Clemson is positioning the programs to continue their leadership. “The graphics program is growing in demand — it’s already one of the largest of its kind in the country,” said Ingram. “From the very beginning of both programs, the faculty entered partnerships with industry where both sides benefit. The departments gain industry input on technique and equipment innovations, receive donated equipment and acquire a nationwide network of employers eager to hire students.”
The graphic communications department currently has 350 undergraduates and 15 graduate students enrolled and 16 faculty members. The packaging science department has 150 undergraduates and nine graduate students enrolled and 10 faculty members.
- Companies:
- Sonoco