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Georgia-Pacific's David Brabham

Leveraging environmental trends to meet high expectations

Georgia-Pacific's David Brabham

Leveraging environmental trends to meet high expectations

Published 05-11-23

Submitted by Georgia-Pacific

David Brabham stood outside with his hand resting on a tree

David Brabham, Georgia-Pacific’s director of stewardship strategy, has been concerned with environmental stewardship since he was just a little boy – and he can prove it.

“I, David Brabham, am committed to aluminum can recycling for a cleaner, more beautiful world,” reads the faded recycling pledge certificate dated January 23, 1991.

Growing up in Ohio, David tried to spend as much time as he could exploring the woods and catching crawdads in the creeks behind his childhood home. That love of being outdoors is what drove him to get a degree in natural resource management from Ohio State.

Recycling pledge

“My dream job was to be a park ranger,” he says.

Which he pursued for a short time interning at Badlands National Park and Seney National Wildlife Refuge. But he eventually realized he was more interested in working in industry to help advance corporate conservation efforts and improve environmental stewardship.

“Feeling like you have a purpose, that you’re contributing to something that makes society better, is important,” he says.

At Georgia-Pacific, David works every day to help the company identify and understand environmental trends and ways to meet the environmental stewardship needs of its customers. David says he recognizes that manufacturing anything has its impacts, but finding ways to reduce those impacts, even minimally, can make a significant difference.

“There’s a personal responsibility to try to do the right things,” he says. “We’re not going to get it right all the time, but I think we can always make progress. That’s the important part.”

David Brabham walking outside with family

Even outside of his job, David works to make it easier for people to connect with nature and the outdoors as a member of the board of Park Pride. Its goal is to work with communities in and around Atlanta to improve the availability and quality of public parks.

David says he wants to make sure that there are beautiful and healthy natural spaces for all future generations to enjoy – and public parks are an instrumental part of that vision.

“When you don’t know that nature is there,” he says, “it’s easy to dismiss it.”

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Georgia-Pacific

Georgia-Pacific

Georgia-Pacific

Based in Atlanta, Georgia-Pacific and its subsidiaries are among the world’s leading manufacturers and marketers of bath tissue, paper towels and napkins, tableware, paper-based packaging, cellulose, specialty fibers, nonwoven fabrics, building products and related chemicals. Our familiar consumer brands include Quilted Northern®, Angel Soft®, Brawny®, Dixie®, enMotion®, Sparkle® and Vanity Fair®. Georgia-Pacific has long been a leading supplier of building products to lumber and building materials dealers and large do-it-yourself warehouse retailers. Its Georgia-Pacific Recycling subsidiary is among the world’s largest traders of paper, metal and plastics. The company operates more than 150 facilities and employs more than 30,000 people directly and creates approximately 89,000 jobs indirectly. For more information, visit: gp.com/about-us . For news, visit: gp.com/news

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