Global Manufacturing Network
Over the past two decades, we have established a global portfolio of trusted manufacturing facilities across glass, metal, plastic, and sustainable categories. Evergreen employees are onsite at all major locations to ensure consistent quality, reliable capacity, and on-time delivery.
Risk mitigation via multiple qualified facilities
Expanded capacity and reduced resource constraints
Optimized freight through volume aggregation
Cross-supplier and multi-field collaborations
Asia
Aerosol
Glass
Metal
Molded plastics
Dispensing
Laminated tubes
Extrusion tubes
Paper
Bio-resin
Flexible Packaging
Middle East
Aerosol
Glass
Metal
Europe
Aerosol
Glass
Metal
Molded plastics
Laminated tubes
Extrusion tubes
Bio-resin
Flexible Packaging
South America
Aerosol
Glass
Metal
Working with Evergreen, companies get access to multiple qualified facilities around the world that meet their requirements at competitive pricing.
Global Coverage That Supports Supply Chain Stability
In today’s volatile environment, having access to a global supplier network is a key strategy for reducing supply chain risk. When companies work with partners that operate qualified facilities across multiple regions, they gain geographic diversification — an important safeguard against disruptions. This type of global footprint helps ensure supply continuity even when individual regions face constraints.
Minimizing Risk and Maximizing Uptime Through Supplier Redundancy
Supply chains are increasingly vulnerable to unexpected events — from natural disasters and raw material shortages to political or economic instability. By working with partners that have multiple qualified sites, companies can avoid total dependence on a single location. This redundancy allows for more flexibility in rerouting orders, shifting capacity, or scaling production as needed, all while minimizing delays and business impact.
Supporting Long-Term Resilience and Business Continuity
Beyond short-term protection, a multi-facility supply model helps build long-term resilience. It improves access to essential resources, reduces lead time variability, and supports consistent quality standards across markets. For businesses looking to protect product performance and delivery timelines at scale, supply redundancy is not just a risk-mitigation tactic — it’s a foundational element of operational continuity.
