Hydropower. Sustainability. Short supply chains. Canada has the ingredients to build a greener manufacturing future, but those strengths haven’t yet extended to steel can production.
That gap became impossible to ignore during two major stress tests: the pandemic and U.S.–Canada trade tensions.
“When the border closed and U.S. supply chains stalled, Canadian food processors were left waiting. Filler lines sat idle. Fresh product was spoiled. Shelves emptied not because we lacked food, but cans,” Jean-Sébastien Vachon, co-founder and vice president of Ideal Can.
Not to mention, every import can add to Canada’s carbon footprint. In those moments, sustainability shifted from a long-term goal to an immediate operational priority and Ideal Can answered that call.
As Canada’s only domestic manufacturer of steel food cans, Ideal Can operates a fully integrated, zero-waste facility. This in-country, in-house approach strengthens supply chain resilience and gives Canadian food, industrial and aerosol producers a dependable local source for high-quality cans.
“We’re here to give Canadian producers a reliable, local option,” says Vachon. “Stronger packaging infrastructure supports a more resilient and sustainable production economy.”
Engineering Better Cans, One Client at a Time
At the heart of its facility is a fully robotized production line designed for adaptability, precision and waste reduction. This system allows the company to tailor every can to each client’s needs, from steel thickness and internal pressure to height, diameter and overall performance.
Every can is 100 percent recyclable, with recycled content ranging from 25 to 35 percent. Scrap metal is recycled on-site and nothing aside from cafeteria waste enters landfills. The facility also recovers and reuses dunnage, minimizing waste throughout production.
Ideal Can use nitrogen welding, creating a smoother, paler and more durable seam that doesn’t affect product taste. Batch numbers and even codes are etched directly onto the surface using laser marking. Unlike inkjet printing, this method avoids contaminants and holds up under sterilization, supporting food safety and audit readiness throughout the product lifecycle.
Every lot includes detailed reports and cans are inspected in real time using AI-powered systems that detect leaks, defects and inconsistencies. Ideal Can operate as a lab partner as much as a manufacturer, giving clients complete visibility into the performance and compliance of every shipment. The company shares these insights openly, adopting an “open book” model that many customers value as a valid extension of their teams.
Once the cans are made, Ideal Can’s delivery model keeps the same efficiency and sustainability. Designed for proximity, it serves customers within a 200-kilometer radius and often skips plastic wrap altogether. Instead, each pallet uses a reusable dunnage system and returnable layer pads made from durable recyclable plastic, stabilizing cans safely for transport. These can be reused up to 15 times, while typical cardboard alternatives last only twice.
Ideal Can Transport—its in-house distribution division—reinforces this local-first, closed-loop approach. By avoiding third-party carriers and long-haul routes, the company reduces volatility, cuts emissions and keeps delivery timelines tight. Each short-haul shipment saves about 12.5 tonnes of CO₂ compared to U.S. imports, adding up to more than 6,600 tonnes of annual savings for one client alone.
A Long-Term Partner for a Low-Impact Future
Choosing the right packaging partner is about consistency, sustainability and long-term strength. Ideal Can deliver on all three. With local production, clean energy and tailored engineering, it helps manufacturers reduce their carbon footprint without increasing costs.
In early 2024, the company scaled its production capacity by 700 percent, adding two high-speed lines to meet rising demand. That expansion signaled a commitment to grow with its clients, not just supply them.
“We’re not a fly-by-night business. We’re here for the long run, bringing economic and environmental value to every relationship. Our customers get a competitive price, a greener solution and a local can they can count on,” concludes Vachon.
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