Date: 19 February 2026
ResponsibleGlass, the newly formed international multi-stakeholder not-for-profit standards and certification programme for the responsible low-carbon production of glass, is looking to help drive down carbon emissions, increase supply chain transparency and accelerate the shift toward more responsible practices across the entire glass industry.
Glass is essential to modern life—from buildings and solar panels to vehicles and packaging—but its production is energy-intensive and contributes 95 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions globally each year. However, unlike steel or timber, the glass sector lacks a unified sustainability framework and certification system.
The initiative – which has been backed by some of the world’s largest glass and industrial companies, in addition to global mining standards organisations and global car brands such as Jaguar Land Rover is being spearheaded by a small team including Francis Sullivan, ResponsibleGlass chair and former Head of Sustainability at HSBC and Alan Knight, (Chief Sustainability Officer, We Soda) and former board member at ResponsibleSteel, which, in less than a decade, has grown into a network of more than 160 members worldwide, including major steelmakers, NGOs and end-users.
The ResponsibleGlass programme brings together organisations from across the glass, industrial, automotive and mining sectors, as well as civil society, to develop the first multi-stakeholder independent, global standard and certification system for responsible, low‑carbon glass production. Founding members include ARUP, Belron, Ciner Glass, NSG Group, Stara Glass, WE Soda, DSS+, Climate Group, Equitable Origin and IRMA, with supporters such as ARM, Cary Group, JLR, Glass Technology Services and ERM CVS.
Glass Futures is a global centre of excellence for glass R&D, innovation and training, which opened in 2022, bringing together industry, academia and government to accelerate decarbonisation, circularity and technological innovation across the glass and foundation industries.
The organisation runs a 165,000 sq ft Global Centre of Excellence in St Helens, UK, featuring an independent pilot‑scale furnace capable of producing up to 30 tonnes of glass per day for industrial‑scale decarbonisation trials. Its specialist capabilities include low‑carbon furnace innovation, hybrid‑fuel and electrified systems, sustainable raw materials, circularity solutions and digital transformation in glass manufacturing.
By joining ResponsibleGlass, Glass Futures will apply its scientific expertise, testing capability and innovation leadership to help co‑develop and validate the ResponsibleGlass Standard and support its global adoption.
Following the launch of the ResponsibleGlass initiative last year, a multi‑stakeholder Council has now been established, bringing together manufacturers, suppliers and major glass users across sectors ranging from automotive to soda ash production. This Council is already progressing the development of the ResponsibleGlass standard, Version 1.0 of which will be published later this year and will provide the industry with a clear, practical blueprint for responsible glass production and a pathway toward a globally recognised and trusted standard.
Sarah Harrold, Head of Strategy and Government Engagement at Glass Futures, said:
"Joining ResponsibleGlass as a founding member is an exciting step for us. Glass plays an essential role across so many industries, and yet the world has never had a truly independent, global sustainability standard for this vital material. By co‑creating the ResponsibleGlass standard, we’re helping to shape a future where transparency, circularity, and accountability are embedded across the entire glass supply chain."
"We’re especially proud to support an initiative that not only raises the bar for sustainability, but also encourages innovation—unlocking new technologies, processes and partnerships that will shape the industry’s future. We look forward to collaborating with partners worldwide to build a standard that will raise the bar for the sector and support real, measurable impact."
Francis Sullivan Chair ResponsibleGlass said:
"We are absolutely delighted to welcome Glass Futures as our latest member. In our mission to co-create a credible independent standard for the glass industry, having a powerhouse of innovation like Glass Futures at the table is a significant milestone. Their unique ability to bridge the gap between visionary R&D and practical, industrial-scale application is exactly what ResponsibleGlass needs – to help ensure that the future of glass is decarbonised, sustainable and fundamentally responsible."
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