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		Lego opens a factory in Vietnam it says will make toys without adding 
		emissions to the atmosphere
		[April 09, 2025]  By 
		ANIRUDDHA GHOSAL 
		BINH DUONG, Vietnam (AP) — Lego opened a $1 billion factory in Vietnam 
		on Wednesday that it says will make toys without adding planet-warming 
		gas to the atmosphere by relying entirely on clean energy.
 The factory in the industrial area of Binh Duong, close to Ho Chi Minh 
		City, is the first in Vietnam that aims to run entirely on clean energy. 
		Lego says it will do that by early 2026.
 
 It's the Danish company's sixth worldwide and its second in Asia. It 
		will use high-tech equipment to produce colorful Lego bricks for 
		Southeast Asia’s growing markets.
 
 “We just want to make sure that the planet that the children inherit 
		when they grow up needs to be a planet that is still there. That is 
		functional,” Lego CEO Niels Christiansen told The Associated Press.
 
 The factory is an important factor in Lego's quest to stop adding 
		greenhouse gases by 2050. It has a shorter-term target of reducing 
		emissions by 37% by 2032. The privately held group makes its bricks out 
		of oil-based plastic and says it has invested more than $1.2 billion in 
		a search for more sustainable alternatives. But those efforts have not 
		always been successful.
 
 Fast-industrializing Vietnam also aims to achieve net-zero emissions by 
		2050, so it needs more of its factories to use clean energy. The country 
		hopes the plant’s 12,400 solar panels and energy storage system will 
		help set a precedent for more sustainable manufacturing.
 
		
		 
		The blocks are made from differently colored plastic grains that are 
		melted at high temperatures and then fed into metal molds. The 
		highly-automated factory uses robots for making the bricks to a tenth of 
		a hair's width precision and then packaging them. It eventually will 
		employ thousands of mostly skilled workers to operate these machines, 
		Some of them have already begun work after being trained in in Lego's 
		factory in eastern China.
 Manufacturing makes up a fifth of Vietnam's GDP and consumes half the 
		energy it uses. There are plans to phase out its coal power plants by 
		2040.
 
 The Lego factory, which spans 62 soccer fields, sets the “blueprint” for 
		making large, power-guzzling factories sustainable while remaining 
		profitable, said Mimi Vu, a founder of the consultancy Raise Partners in 
		Ho Chi Minh City. “Sometimes it takes a big company, like Lego, to take 
		those risks. To show that we can do it … And we can be profitable,” she 
		said.
 
		The factory will benefit from a new 2024 rule known as a direct power 
		purchase agreement or DPPA, which allows big foreign companies to buy 
		clean energy directly from solar and wind power producers and to meet 
		their clean energy requirements.
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            Lego characters in Vietnamese traditional costumes are displayed at 
			Lego factory in Binh Duong, Vietnam Wednesday, April, 2, 2025. (AP 
			Photo/Hau Dinh) 
            
			
			 The factory will be linked to an 
			adjacent energy center where electricity can be stored in large 
			batteries.
 “So even if the sun is only shining during the day, we store the 
			energy and can use it all over. That will cover by far the majority 
			of the consumption of the factory,” added Christiansen,
 
 The remaining 10%-20% of the factory's energy needs will be met 
			through agreements with other clean energy producers.
 
 “Lego and Vietnam, we are having the same aspirations. We both want 
			to be green, to play our part in the climate. And I think this with 
			the solar and battery and DPPA, it is showcasing that it can be 
			done,” Jesper Hassellund Mikkelsen, Senior Vice President Asia 
			Operations at the LEGO Group told The AP.
 
 The company will also open a distribution center in Vietnam's 
			southern Dong Nai province to help serve markets in Australia and 
			other Asian countries where it sees an opportunity for growth. 
			Locating the Lego factories in regions they supply helps to insulate 
			them from the tariffs ordered by U.S. President Donald Trump, 
			Christiansen said.
 
 “Right now, I am probably more observant of what does this mean to 
			growth in the world? Do we see consumer sentiment changing in parts 
			of the world or not, and what would that potentially mean?" he said.
 
 The five buildings in the factory meet high energy efficiency 
			standards. Lego also has planted 50,000 trees – twice the number of 
			the trees it cut to clear land for the factory. It's the first Lego 
			factory to replace single-use plastic bags with paper bags for 
			packaging.
 
 Lego's founder, Ole Kirk Kristiansen, started the company as a 
			wooden toy maker before patenting the iconic plastic bricks in 1958. 
			It is still is seeking a way to make its plastic bricks more 
			environmentally friendly.
 
 Christiansen said Lego bricks last decades and could be reused, 
			though the ultimately ambition is to make them out of more renewable 
			materials. He said that a third of the materials used in Lego bricks 
			made last year were from renewable and recycled sources. But that's 
			more expensive than plastic made out of fossil fuels.
 
 “It’s not inexpensive at this point in time, but we believe if we 
			... lean into that, we help create a supply chain for the type of 
			plastic materials that are not based on fossil fuel,” he said.
 
			
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