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While
Trevor is proud of the recognition
that he’s received, he says he owes
an immense debt of gratitude to
Nampak, which afforded him the
opportunities to develop his career
over a period of 42 years. What’s
more, he didn’t work alone and adds
that his colleagues deserve much of
the credit. “In the weeks leading up
to the induction ceremony, I thought
a great deal about my early career
and colleagues at that time. Derek
Jacobs gave me my first real
career-break, promoting me from a
technical role into marketing
director. The names Arthur Buhrlen,
Brian Graham, Francis Hannay, Klaus
Hass, Ian McBean and Koos Oostuizen
sprang to mind.”

The motivation for Trevor’s
induction was received from the late
Michael Gigliotti, a former US
consultant to Metal Box/Nampak and a
class of 2003 Hall of Famer.
At the black-tie ceremony in
Chicago, USA on 22 June, Trevor said
that he was honoured to be included
in the Plastics Hall of Fame and he
congratulated the organisers for
extending recognition to other parts
of the world. He also paid tribute
to his other eight Hall of Famers
and his Nampak colleagues.
Trevor joined Metal Box Plastics as
a Laboratory Assistant in 1967. At
that time, he worked at the
divisional R&D facility, which was
based at the Isando factory. His
role involved approving polymers,
establishing shelf-life of customer
products in packaging made from
various polymers, and assisting
production staff and customers with
quality issues. “In 1967, Isando was
a brand new facility that included a
wide range of technologies,
blow-molding, injection-molding,
thermoforming, film extrusion, and
numerous decorating processors. We
manufactured a variety of plastic
packaging products, from fertiliser
bags to beverage bottles.”
In the late 1970’s, Trevor was part
of a team that negotiated and
managed the introduction of the
first two-litre PET bottle for
Coca-Cola in South Africa. The ABI
Benrose plant was the first to start
bottling in plastic, following hot
on the heels of Coca-Cola in the
USA, which launched PET just 10
months earlier.
The chosen technology was from
Nissei in Japan. “The partnership
was so successful that our
technicians were called upon by the
Japanese to assist Nissei
installations in other parts of the
English-speaking world,” says
Trevor.
He also did a lot of work in respect
of the returnable PET bottle, as
well as packaging wine in plastic.
In 1982, Trevor was appointed
Managing Director of the Metal Box
Plastics Division; and in 1985, he
became Divisional Chief Executive of
the merged Nampak/Metal Box Rigid
Plastics businesses. From 1990, he
held several senior positions at
Nampak Limited, before being named
Group Chief Executive Officer in
2000 and Non-Executive Chairman in
2003.
In addition to Trevor’s executive
leadership of Nampak, the Hall of
Fame recognised his significant
contribution to the plastics and
packaging industries as a whole.
In this regard, Trevor was heavily
involved in drawing up the
constitution for the Plastics
Institute of Southern Africa in
1973. He did so in his capacity as a
National Committee member.
He also served as:
· Vice President of the Institute of
Packaging (South Africa) in 1980
· Chairman of the Association of
Plastics Processors of South Africa
from 1986 to 1989
· President of the Plastics
Federation of South Africa from 1989
to 1991
In 1993, the Black Management Forum
gave Trevor a special award for
being “The Most Progressive CEO in
South Africa”. This was in
recognition of his leadership role
in the transition from Apartheid to
democracy.
His other accolades include:
· Gold Medal from the Plastics
Federation of South Africa for
exceptional service to the South
African plastics industry (1991)
· Packaging Achiever of the Year
from the Packaging Council of South
Africa (PACSA) for distinguished
service to the South African
packaging industry (1997)
His role as a governor of Rhodes
University was also mentioned.
Given the versatility of plastic,
Trevor isn’t surprised by its
immense popularity as a packaging
material. But, he never imagined the
advances it would make in
engineering, domestic appliances,
fabrics and so on.
Nampak Chief Executive Officer,
Andrew Marshall, congratulated
Trevor on his induction into the
Hall of Fame. He says that it’s a
fitting tribute to someone who’s
made packaging excellence his life’s
work.
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