How Micro Molding At Accumold Is Driving Sustainability From The Inside Out
Ankeny, Iowa, USA - With the recent International Day for Biological Diversity, sustainability takes on renewed urgency, not just for environmentalists and policymakers, but for the manufacturers whose technologies shape the future of our planet. In the age of micro everything, where devices are shrinking and efficiency is paramount, the spotlight turns to those enabling this miniaturization with precision and purpose. For micro molding leader Accumold, sustainability isn't a buzzword. It's an integrated strategy, and it begins at the micron level.
“Sustainability in manufacturing is often talked about in terms of energy use and waste reduction, which are of course critical,” says Brett Saddoris, Technical Marketing Manager at Accumold. “But for us, sustainability is also about enabling our customers to innovate in ways that reduce their environmental footprint, whether that’s a smaller, lighter medical device, an electronics component that extends product life, or a diagnostic tool that limits resource usage. We don’t just make parts. We make future-ready solutions.”
Accumold holds ISO 14001 certification, a globally recognized benchmark for environmental management. From responsible energy use to material recycling protocols, the company’s Iowa-based facility reflects a longstanding commitment to operating with environmental consciousness. Yet the greatest contribution Accumold makes to sustainability may be through the parts it molds for its customers, tiny components that often enable dramatic gains in energy efficiency, material reduction, and long-term reliability.
For example, Accumold’s work in next-generation medical diagnostics includes ultra-small fluidic channels and valves that help create more compact, less invasive point-of-care testing devices. These not only reduce patient trauma and improve care, but also minimize material usage and transportation needs across healthcare systems.
In the wearable and implantable device sector, Accumold’s micro molding expertise allows OEMs to pack more function into smaller, lighter designs, meaning less material, fewer secondary components, and longer device lifespans. “When your parts weigh less than a grain of rice, you can rethink packaging, logistics, and power consumption,” notes Saddoris. “It’s incremental at the component level, but revolutionary in aggregate.”
In consumer electronics, miniaturized parts enable thinner, more energy-efficient devices that reduce overall material inputs and extend product life. In automotive and mobility technologies, micro molded sensor housings and sealing elements contribute to the broader electrification and lightweighting trend driving emissions reductions globally.
“All of this reinforces what we tell our partners. Sustainability doesn’t always start with the end product. Sometimes, it starts with the part no one can even see,” Saddoris adds. “Our customers are rethinking how to do more with less, and we’re giving them the parts that make that vision a reality.”
As the pressure mounts on global manufacturers to act on climate and resource challenges, Accumold stands as an example of how high-precision manufacturing (even at microscopic scales) can deliver macro impact. Sustainability, in this case, comes not just from what a company does within its own four walls, but from the possibilities it creates for others.