Business

Our company offers a diverse range of products and services that cater to various industries, such as printing equipment, optical devices, data storage, and semiconductor materials. Specifically, we provide high-quality Fujifilm products that are designed to meet the needs and demands of our customers in these industries.

World Environment Day 2025 | Five ways we contribute to help #BeatPlasticPollution

From packaging to components, the modern world is wrapped in a material that was designed to last forever but often used just once. And the clean-up efforts, while necessary, can’t outrun the sheer volume of waste being created. Every year, more than 400 million tonnes of plastic are produced worldwide – and less than 10% of it is recycled. The rest? It ends up buried, burned, or drifting through our ecosystems in ways that have become alarmingly familiar.

Plastic pollution has moved beyond a distant problem, it’s here – in our rivers, cities, and increasingly, in our choices. This year’s World Environment Day calls on all of us to rethink them. At Fujifilm, we’re proud to be part of the solution, leveraging innovation and commitment to contribute to ending plastic pollution. From industry-leading recycling practices to groundbreaking materials research, we’re taking actionable steps toward a more sustainable future.

Driving Circular Economies: Our Resource Circulation System

As early as 1995, Fujifilm Business Innovation introduced a cutting-edge resource circulation system based on the belief that used products are valuable resources, not waste. This innovative approach covers the entire product life cycle—from product planning, development, and manufacturing through to disposal.

By aiming for virtually “zero waste,” we are reusing components from collected products through advanced recycling technologies, ensuring that these resources find new life rather than contributing to landfills.

Recycled Plastic in Products

Since 1998, we’ve been pioneering the use of recycled plastic from in-house products as raw materials. For instance, ABS plastic components from used products – such as outer casings and paper trays – are expertly sorted, crushed, cleaned, and reformed into raw materials. These recycled plastics are subsequently introduced into Fujifilm products, maintaining the same high quality as virgin ABS resin and meeting rigorous standards, including UL (Underwriter’s Laboratories) certification.

Flame-Resistant Biobased Plastics

To reduce our reliance on petroleum-based plastics, Fujifilm is advancing its research and development of plant-derived biobased plastics. Our proprietary cellulose/ABS alloy technology has overcome traditional challenges like flame retardancy and dimensional stability, allowing us to use these materials in our products as interior components.

Combating Marine Plastic Pollution

Fujifilm is also tackling the crisis of marine litter. In early 2024, we began incorporating marine plastic waste as raw materials for our multifunction devices. This trailblazing initiative marks a significant step forward – one we’re proud to say is a first in the industry!*

*Based on internal research.

Re-Manufacturing Toner Cartridges in Europe

At the Circular Manufacturing Center of FUJIFILM Manufacturing Europe B.V., opened in May 2024, we collect used toner cartridges from across Europe to give them a second life. Through processes such as disassembly, cleaning, inspection, and remanufacturing, these cartridges are transformed into high-quality products, re-entering the European market as “new” toner cartridges.

This effort doesn’t stop there. Fujifilm also envisions expanding these innovative remanufacturing processes to other products, including multifunction printers and production printer spare parts. By doing so, we are working to close the materials loop and minimize waste even further.

FUJIFILM QuickSnap: A Model of Sustainable Design

Did you know that up to 60% of materials in our QuickSnap one-time-use cameras are reused? The plastic housings of these cameras are re-pelletized and remolded into new housings, while other key components are also recycled. Even better, this sustainable cycle can continue indefinitely, showcasing how we innovate to reduce our environmental footprint while delivering high-quality products.

Find out more about Fujifilm’s resource circulation initiatives here.

A Shared Mission: How You Can Make a Difference

World Environment Day is a vivid reminder that safeguarding our planet is a shared responsibility, and also a shared opportunity to create a better future. The challenges may be immense, but the solutions are within reach – if we act together. The power to make a difference lies within each of us. So, here are four simple ways you can contribute to a healthier planet, starting today:

Plant a Tree

Participate in a tree-planting initiative or plant one in your own garden. Trees play a critical role in reducing carbon dioxide while improving biodiversity. Every tree you plant is a lasting gift to the planet and future generations.

Join a Clean-Up Drive

Take part in a clean-up of your local environment, whether it’s a park, street, beach, or even your workplace. Not only does this help reduce pollution, but it also demonstrates the beauty of collective effort. Bring a team of colleagues or family members along!

Embrace the 3Rs: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle

Adopt daily habits that reduce waste. Carry reusable water bottles, coffee cups, or shopping bags to eliminate single-use plastics. Repurpose items wherever possible, and ensure proper recycling of waste materials to extend the life of resources.

Spread the Message

Your actions inspire others. Share your contributions to World Environment Day – whether participating in Fujifilm initiatives, local drives, or at-home efforts. The ripple effect of awareness can move mountains and turn individual actions into collective change.

From Banepa to Willich: a quiet exchange with lasting impact

The journey from Nepal to Germany is not a common one. It’s also not the kind of trip that makes headlines. No delegation, no ribbon-cutting, no press-conference. Just a nurse stepping off a long flight, carrying with her years of hands-on experience, a notebook filled with questions, and determination to bring change to her patients at home.

Sister Gayatri works at Scheer memorial Adventist Hospital in Banepa, Nepal – a modest institution with limited resources but an outsized mission: to raise the standard of care in a region where too many people still go without. This May, she arrived in Willich, Germany not as a visitor but as a collaborator. An experienced endoscopy nurse, she is taking part in a work-shadowing program, with a focus on knowledge transfer and training in endoscope reprocessing, damage prevention, and product use. Sister Gayatri is receiving a detailed introduction to our ELUXEO series, but just as importantly, she’s experiencing how teams work together, how systems are built, and how small improvements can lead to long-term impact.

She is here to observe. To learn. To ask why certain protocols exist, and how others could be adapted. In a workshop that repairs and reprocesses some of the most advanced endoscopic tools, she listens closely, takes notes, and asks questions that cut to the heart of daily practice. And the value of this exchange is mutual. Her perspective – shaped by years of practical improvisation in a resource-limited setting – brings invaluable insight to our processes.

In the language of healthcare, this kind of exchange is called ‘capacity building’. Alongside transferring technology or introducing new tools, this collaboration focuses on practical knowledge that helps hospitals build systems they can maintain and adapt to their realities. The most valuable lessons here are often the simplest: how to organize a workflow, or how to prevent damage to delicate instruments – the kind of experience-based learning that lays the groundwork for long-term progress.

‘It was a great experience to see the wide range of products Fujifilm has to offer. Endoscope reprocessing is a very important issue for us and has high priority. In Nepal, we are not yet able to meet the requirements as they currently exist in Germany, but we hope that other companies will eventually provide support in this area in the future to raise standards in our country,’ – Sister Gayatri.

Her visit is part of a broader collaboration focused on a simple but powerful mission: to share expertise to further improve the quality of medical care in places where resources are limited. As a total healthcare company, we are committed to address critical gaps in access to medical care for people across the globe, helping ensure that every patient, no matter where they are in the world, can be treated with the best care possible.

From small steps to major milestones

Our relationship with Scheer Memorial started quietly, in 2019, with a simple request – a replacement device. At that time, we sent it right away, also donating some devices that we knew were indispensable to provide a service to the local community.

A lot has happened since then. Thanks to Fujifilm’s support, the hospital now has two fully equipped endoscopy rooms – an extraordinary advance in a region where the population often has limited access to medical care. An impressive success is a colon cancer screening program now starting in the district of Ramechhap – one of the few in Nepal. It’s an ambitious step for a rural hospital, but also a hopeful one. This shows how technology and commitment can work together to improve the quality of life of an entire region. 

Shared values, big impact 

Our partnership with Scheer Memorial is not unique in mission, but it is personal in practice. It represents work that often happens behind the scenes, away from the spotlight: small, steady efforts that build over time.

Your support enables us to provide services in line with international standards and brings us closer to our goal of becoming a leading healthcare facility,’ – Scheer Memorial Adventist Hospital.

There is still a long way to go. But with visits like Sister Gayatri’s, and ongoing collaboration between our teams, we’re reminded that global health progress doesn’t always come in breakthroughs. Sometimes, it arrives in a suitcase. In a quiet question. And in a firm belief that the best change maker is knowledge – passed from one hand to another.

We look forward to further strengthening this partnership, making a long-term difference, and putting more smiles on faces around the world! 

Understanding the big picture: Wako Chemicals at DGHM 2024

What is the first thing you imagine when thinking about climate change? Usually, our mind jumps to the dramatic images – melting glaciers, rising sea levels, and extreme weather events. It’s all true. These are the visible, large-scale effects that grab our attention. However, there’s also another side to this story, one that’s equally important yet often overlooked: the impact on the microscopic world of microorganisms, including bacteria, viruses, fungi, so the unseen majority. They are everywhere – in the air, soil, water, and even inside our bodies. Thus, such global changes as climate change, shifting ecosystems, or the rise of drug-resistant pathogens have profound impact on microbiology and infection biology.

By recognizing and addressing these effects, we can better protect our health. And the 7th Joint Microbiology & Infection Conference of the German Society for Hygiene and Microbiology (DGHM) and the Association for General and Applied Microbiology (VAAM) offered a unique platform for this. From June 2nd to 5th, our Fujifilm Wako Chemicals Europe team met with internationally renowned speakers and young scientists in Würzburg to exchange information on current developments in diagnostics and clinical practice in microbiology.

This year, we were excited to showcase our innovative invasive fungal infection diagnostic system LIMUSAVE MT-7500. It is a state-of-the-art system for measuring the pan-fungal biomarker beta-D-Glucan. This device has 10 measuring stations and can be expanded to 30. This means it can flexibly handle a low to high volume of tests simultaneously. More to that, LIMUSAVE MT-7500 measures the analyte quantitatively by a single test procedure, allowing for immediate and simple on-site testing by labs at medical centers.

Find out more about the LIMUSAVE MT-7500 here.

Celebrating 50 years of innovation: FUJIFILM Wako Chemicals Europe GmbH celebrates a milestone in its history

Photo by © Offenblende / Andrej

FUJIFILM Wako Chemicals Europe GmbH celebrated its 50th anniversary with a special event on 29 May 2024. Founded in 1974 as Wako Chemicals GmbH in Düsseldorf and expanded to Neuss in 1983, this event marks a significant milestone for the company. Acquired by Fujifilm Corporation in 2017, FUJIFILM Wako Chemicals Europe GmbH has continued to thrive with a focus on diagnostic reagents, laboratory chemicals and speciality chemicals.

All Photos by © Offenblende / Andrej

The company generously donated €6,000 to the Neuss City Library to support STEM education initiatives in honour of its golden jubilee. The sponsorship will be used to fund a series of workshops on topics such as robotics, chemistry, biology, programming and artificial intelligence. In line with the library’s mission to provide educational opportunities for children, teenagers and families, these workshops are interactive and engaging.

Koichi Yoshida, President of FUJIFILM Wako Pure Chemical Corporation said:

“FUJIFILM Wako Chemicals Europe GmbH has a proud history of developing high-quality products that meet the needs of cutting-edge research. We are thrilled to celebrate our 50th anniversary by giving back to the community and supporting STEM education in collaboration with the Neuss City Library. Through this sponsorship, we hope to inspire the next generation of scientists and innovators and foster a passion for discovery and learning.”

The event was attended by Dr Jörg Geerlings, Deputy Mayor, Koichi Yoshida, President of FUJIFILM Wako Pure Chemical Corporation, and Hans-Jörg Schlumberger, Managing Director of FUJIFILM Wako Chemicals Europe GmbH. Dr Geerlings presented the cheque.

All Photos by © Offenblende / Andrej

Fujifilm CodeBlue: Supporting life-saving work with IT solutions

COVID-19 has become a serious global challenge that has tangibly changed the shape of societies and work environments all around the world. But it has also become a wake-up call that has shown just how invaluable access to real-time data can be, especially when it comes to critical care and life-saving services.

Since most EU countries urged workers to stay at home, setting up long-term lockdowns and restrictions, companies faced an urgent need for quick digital solutions that would facilitate their operations and keep them on track. So did Presbyterian Support Northern (PSN).

PSN is a health and social service organisation that provides practical and compassionate support to New Zealanders. One of their services, Lifeline Aotearoa, runs a 24-hour crisis helpline, providing support to people in distress, including those at high risk of suicide. In 2020, in response to the pandemic, the New Zealand government declared a national lockdown, forcing all employees to stay home. The PSN and its mental health helpline service team had only 48 hours to find and set up a quick and effective digital solution for remote working so that they could continue to help people needing mental and emotional support.

“Before COVID, we supported about 8,000 calls every month. And since COVID, we’re now supporting 10,000 calls a month. And we support about 15 to 25 people every day that are at high risk of self-harm,” Helena de Fontenay, Lifeline Aotearoa, a service of Presbyterian Support Northern.

For Fujifilm CodeBlue, it became a priority to effectively address this challenge, as they witnessed its magnitude. For almost 20 years, they’ve been helping businesses throughout Australia and New Zealand access affordable and forward-thinking technology solutions – from managed IT services and cloud solutions, to video conferencing and project management – to help them work smarter and more efficiently.

The company has already been providing IT support to the PSN Lifeline team for some time, but this case was especially urgent. After the lockdown, there was a huge increase in calls, and the Lifeline team could not work from home. Fujifilm CodeBlue had to quickly provide a remote working environment that allowed the team to access their systems and collaborate with the same level of flexibility that they would have from the office. It allowed to respond to calls and texts around the clock and ensured secure communication for the staff and people calling the helpline.  

“During lockdown we had a call from a young lady who was having thoughts of wanting to hurt herself or self-harm. And she really didn’t see what her value was in this world. Through talking to her, we could find what was important to her. And what was important to her was her peers at school, and that she brought a shining light to them. Her self-harming or not being here anymore meant that shining light wasn’t going to be there. Finding that meant that the thoughts around self-harm or ending her life had faded. And every call like that means that we can support someone that needs us,”Daniel Mclvor, Fujifilm CodeBlue New Zealand.

Read the full story here.

Frontier LP9700. The powerhouse for excellent images.

The new FUJIFILM Frontier LP9700 is equipped with the latest technology and will impress you with its high print speed, excellent image quality and great versatility. Combine it with the CX 3240 creative duplex printer and you have superpower for your photo business.

The LP 9700 is equipped with directly modulated semiconductor lasers, which make digital exposure possible with an incredible image quality. Fine details and subtle changes in colour tone are reproduced at a high level of resolution.

Superior image processing Fujifilm’s Image Intelligence™ technology automatically compensates for problematic conditions such as poor lighting, excessive backlighting, high contrast or under/over-exposure, ensuring beautiful images.

A dual paper feeder and chemistry optimised for fast processing enable fast development with excellent quality. The LP9700 achieves a very high print speed of 2,117 prints per hour. With 10 x 15 cm format.

For the first time in the Fujifilm Frontier series, you can use ultra-thin Album Paper XS with a thickness of just 135 μm. It’s ideal for lay-flat albums and photobooks, and it’s great for meeting a variety of other product needs.

The journey doesn’t end with prints alone. With the FUJIFILM Order-It software, you can effortlessly expand your offerings to include calendars, collages, photo sets, greeting cards, and more. This not only enhances your customer’s experience but also paves the way for an extremely profitable photo business.