Midal Cables Releases 2024 Sustainability Report Under GROW Framework
Aluminium cable manufacturer reports environmental gains across three countries
Midal Cables has published its third annual sustainability report. The Bahrain-based manufacturer released the document on 6 May 2026. It details environmental performance across facilities in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Mozambique.

The company reports a 13% reduction in greenhouse gas emission intensity over the reporting period. Renewable energy capacity now stands at 4.491 megawatts peak. Moreover, employee training exceeded 11,000 hours during 2024.
For UK businesses tracking supply chain sustainability, these metrics offer insight into how manufacturers in energy-intensive sectors approach carbon reduction. Consequently, companies that specify cables for infrastructure projects can reference these benchmarks when evaluating suppliers.
GROW framework structures four-pillar approach to environmental targets
Midal operates under an ESG framework it calls GROW. The acronym stands for Greener Future, Responsible Business, Operational Excellence, and Well-Being. This structure guides sustainability activities across all sites.
Khalid A. Latif, the company’s Group Chief Executive Officer, stated: “This third edition of our Sustainability Report reflects the continued progress we are making across all areas of our business, driven by the consistent implementation of our ESG strategy.”
The framework addresses multiple operational areas. Environmental targets include annual increases in renewable energy share and waste minimization in wire drawing and stranding processes. Social commitments cover workforce development and community engagement. Governance priorities focus on audit completion and certification maintenance.
During 2024, the company completed 75 audits across its operations. All management system certifications remain current. Additionally, Midal secured an EcoVadis Platinum rating for 2025 performance. This places the manufacturer in the top 1% of companies assessed globally by that rating system.
The company’s 2024 report, published in June 2025, showed more than 3,300 tonnes of avoided CO₂ emissions. Renewable energy use at the Bahrain facility increased by 7% year on year. Diesel consumption fell by 35% across all three sites.
Renewable capacity expansion and fuel switching deliver measurable carbon cuts
Total renewable energy capacity reached 4.491 MWp by the end of the reporting period. This represents continued expansion from previous years. The Bahrain facility led adoption with a 7% increase in renewable energy use during 2024.
Diesel consumption declined by 35% across operations in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Mozambique. This reduction came from both operational efficiency improvements and fuel switching. The combined effect lowered Scope 1 emissions from direct operations.
Scope 2 emissions, which cover purchased electricity, also decreased as renewable capacity grew. However, the report does not specify the proportion of total energy now sourced from renewables. Scope 3 Category 1 emissions, covering purchased materials, remain part of the company’s disclosure. These typically represent the largest share of emissions for cable manufacturers.
The 13% reduction in GHG emission intensity measures emissions per unit of production. Intensity metrics help track progress independent of production volume changes. Therefore, they provide a clearer picture of operational efficiency than absolute emissions totals.
UK manufacturers evaluating their own carbon trajectories can compare these figures against sector benchmarks. Cable production requires significant energy input for metal processing. As a result, emissions intensity improvements often depend on both energy sourcing and process efficiency.
Social programs reach 1,100 beneficiaries while training hours exceed 11,000
Workforce development featured prominently in the report. Training programs delivered more than 11,000 hours of instruction during 2024. Safety initiatives engaged over 1,300 employees. These figures represent continued investment in skills and workplace standards.
Community programs reached more than 1,100 beneficiaries across the three operating countries. The report does not detail specific initiatives. However, social impact assessments were completed for all sites during the reporting period.
The International Finance Corporation supports Midal’s Mozambique operations. IFC involvement requires adherence to Performance Standards on Environmental and Social Sustainability. Initial environmental scoping for the Mozambique facility confirmed no fatal environmental flaws.
For businesses assessing suppliers under ESG tender criteria, workforce training metrics and community engagement indicate operational maturity. Public sector procurement increasingly requires evidence of social value. Furthermore, PPN 06/21 carbon reduction plans demand supply chain engagement on workforce skills.
Emissions intensity, renewable capacity, and governance metrics summarized
The third sustainability report includes the following key metrics:
- Greenhouse gas emission intensity decreased by 13% compared to the previous reporting period.
- Renewable energy capacity expanded to 4.491 megawatts peak across all facilities.
- More than 3,300 tonnes of CO₂ emissions were avoided during 2024 through efficiency measures and energy switching.
- Employee training exceeded 11,000 hours, with safety programs engaging over 1,300 people.
- Community programs reached more than 1,100 beneficiaries in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Mozambique.
- The company completed 75 audits and maintained full management system certifications throughout the period.
- EcoVadis awarded a Platinum rating for 2025 performance, placing Midal in the top 1% of assessed companies globally.
- Diesel fuel consumption fell by 35% across all three manufacturing sites during 2024.
Third-party verification and international standards underpin disclosure credibility
Midal maintains certifications across multiple management system standards. These include quality, environmental, and occupational health and safety frameworks. The company completed 75 audits during the reporting period. This figure suggests both internal reviews and third-party certification assessments.
The EcoVadis Platinum rating provides external validation of ESG performance. EcoVadis assesses companies across four themes: environment, labor and human rights, ethics, and sustainable procurement. Platinum status represents the highest tier. Only 1% of assessed companies achieve this level.
IFC involvement in the Mozambique facility adds another layer of scrutiny. IFC Performance Standards cover environmental and social risk management. They require regular monitoring and stakeholder engagement. Compliance with these standards often exceeds local regulatory requirements.
UK businesses evaluating international suppliers can reference such certifications when conducting due diligence. Sustainable procurement frameworks increasingly require evidence of third-party verification. Similarly, carbon reporting under frameworks like the Streamlined Energy and Carbon Reporting regulations benefits from verified supply chain data.
UK procurement implications center on supply chain carbon accounting and tender responses
Manufacturing supply chains contribute significantly to Scope 3 emissions. Cable and wire products appear in construction, infrastructure, and energy projects. Therefore, emissions from cable production flow through to downstream customers’ carbon inventories.
Businesses completing Scope 3 calculations need supplier-specific emissions data. Generic industry averages often overestimate actual impacts. Suppliers with detailed carbon reporting enable more accurate footprint calculations. This becomes particularly important for companies targeting net zero or preparing PPN 06/21 compliance plans.
Public sector tenders increasingly require carbon reduction plans from suppliers. The Cabinet Office’s PPN 06/21 mandates such plans for contracts above £5 million annually. Suppliers must demonstrate emissions measurement, reduction targets, and progress tracking. Carbon reporting support helps businesses meet these requirements without diverting internal resources.
Private sector buyers also use ESG criteria in supplier selection. Some large corporations now require carbon disclosure as a condition of doing business. Consequently, manufacturers without robust reporting may face competitive disadvantage in certain markets.
Midal’s published data allows customers to incorporate specific figures into their own carbon accounting. The 13% emissions intensity reduction demonstrates year-on-year improvement. However, businesses should request product-specific carbon footprints rather than relying on company-wide averages. Different product lines and manufacturing processes carry different carbon intensities.
Energy-intensive industries face parallel challenges in balancing production growth and emissions reduction
Aluminium processing ranks among the most energy-intensive manufacturing activities. Smelting and extrusion require substantial heat and electricity. Cable manufacturers then add further processing for wire drawing, stranding, and insulation application.
Reducing emissions intensity while maintaining or increasing production volume presents engineering and financial challenges. Capital investment in renewable energy capacity requires multi-year payback periods. Process efficiency improvements often involve equipment upgrades or replacement.
UK manufacturers in similar sectors face comparable pressures. The Climate Change Agreement scheme offers reduced Climate Change Levy rates in exchange for energy efficiency targets. Emissions trading schemes place a price on carbon for large emitters. Meanwhile, customer expectations around sustainability continue to rise.
Midal’s approach combines renewable energy expansion with operational efficiency. The 35% diesel reduction suggests targeted fuel switching and process optimization. Renewable capacity growth addresses Scope 2 emissions from purchased electricity. Together, these measures reduce both absolute emissions and emissions per unit of output.
British businesses can apply similar principles. Solar installations on factory roofs or adjacent land provide on-site renewable generation. Heat pump technology can replace gas boilers in some applications. Process audits often identify efficiency opportunities that reduce both energy use and costs.
Scope 3 reporting remains the frontier challenge for manufacturers globally
Most manufacturers’ largest emissions come from purchased materials. This category, known as Scope 3 Category 1, typically exceeds Scopes 1 and 2 combined. For cable manufacturers, aluminium production carries a particularly heavy carbon footprint.
Midal reports Scope 3 Category 1 emissions in its disclosure. However, the report does not specify absolute figures or reduction targets for this category. This reflects an industry-wide challenge. Manufacturers depend on upstream suppliers for emissions data. Data quality and completeness vary widely.
Addressing Scope 3 requires supplier engagement. Some companies now request carbon data as part of procurement processes. Others work with key suppliers on joint reduction initiatives. The most sophisticated approaches involve product-specific lifecycle assessments.
UK businesses pursuing comprehensive carbon reduction should prioritize Scope 3. Carbon reporting services can help establish baseline measurements and identify reduction opportunities. Without Scope 3 data, carbon reduction plans address only a fraction of total impacts.
The shift toward circular economy principles offers another route to Scope 3 reduction. Midal’s “MiRecAL” product line incorporates recycled content. Recycled aluminium requires roughly 5% of the energy needed for primary production. Therefore, increasing recycled content significantly reduces embodied carbon.
Multi-site operations complicate performance tracking and require standardized methodologies
Midal operates manufacturing facilities in three countries. Each site operates under different regulatory frameworks and energy markets. Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, and Mozambique have distinct grid carbon intensities, renewable energy availability, and environmental regulations.
Consolidating performance across multiple sites requires standardized measurement protocols. The GHG Protocol Corporate Standard provides the most widely used framework. It specifies calculation methodologies for Scopes 1, 2, and 3. Location-based and market-based methods for Scope 2 can yield different results depending on renewable energy purchasing mechanisms.
UK manufacturers with multiple facilities face similar consolidation challenges. Different sites may have different emissions profiles based on production mix, equipment age, and energy sources. Consequently, corporate-level targets must account for site-level variations.
The 35% diesel reduction across all three Midal sites suggests coordinated implementation of efficiency measures. Rolling out improvements across multiple locations requires documentation of best practices and adaptation to local conditions. This organizational capability indicates operational maturity.
Where to find additional technical resources and regulatory guidance
The full Midal Cables sustainability report is available on the company’s website. It provides detailed breakdowns of environmental, social, and governance performance. Businesses considering Midal as a supplier can request product-specific emissions data directly.
The Department for Energy Security and Net Zero publishes guidance on carbon reporting requirements for UK businesses. This includes methodology for calculating Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions under various reporting frameworks.
The GHG Protocol website offers free calculation tools and technical guidance. The Corporate Value Chain (Scope 3) Standard specifically addresses supply chain emissions. These resources help businesses establish consistent measurement approaches.
EcoVadis provides sustainability ratings for over 100,000 companies globally. The EcoVadis platform allows businesses to assess suppliers and compare performance across industries. Ratings cover environmental practices, labor rights, ethics, and sustainable procurement.
The International Finance Corporation publishes Performance Standards on Environmental and Social Sustainability. These standards apply to IFC-funded projects but serve as international best practice benchmarks. They cover topics from pollution prevention to community health and safety.
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