
GSE Dispensing has launched its Extended Life Program, a lifecycle support initiative designed to help label and packaging converters maximize the long-term value of their ink dispensing equipment for flexo, gravure and screen applications, through refurbishment, upgrades, retrofits and preventative maintenance.
The program brings together a range of existing and newly developed services under one structured offering, enabling customers to extend equipment lifetime, optimize performance, reduce CO2 impact and adapt their systems to changing operational and sustainability requirements.
The initiative reflects growing demand from converters and ink manufacturers for longer equipment lifecycles, improved resource efficiency and greater operational resilience, amid increasing sustainability pressures, rising material costs and supply chain uncertainty stemming from geopolitical tensions.
The Extended Life Program is tailored to individual customer applications and business needs. Depending on the application and installed configuration, services may include refurbishment and recalibration, preventative maintenance, retrofit upgrades, software updates and extensions, energy-efficiency improvements, electrification upgrades, solvent extraction retrofits, and relocation and ink-changeover support. The program enables GSE dispensing and software systems to evolve alongside changing production requirements, including transitions between ink types, energy sources, workflow upgrades and new sustainability objectives.
Maarten Hummelen, marketing director at GSE Dispensing, said: “Converters are under pressure from many directions – sustainability targets, cost control, shorter lead times and supply chain volatility that affects availability of critical resources. The Extended Life Program is about helping customers protect and improve the value of the equipment they already have, while reducing environmental impact and maintaining high operational performance.”
The launch builds on GSE’s modular engineering philosophy, which the company says enables its Colorsat dispensing systems to be upgraded and adapted throughout their operational life rather than fully replaced. This approach also applies to the company’s Ink manager suite of optional software programs for applications such as inventory control, traceability and reporting, which may be retrospectively added. According to GSE, more than 300 of its dispensing systems worldwide have remained in operation for over 20 years.
“Innovation is not only about developing new equipment,” Hummelen said. “It is also about continuously improving installed systems, so they remain efficient, reliable and fit for the future. With modular design principles, many components can continue performing for decades while controls, software and selected parts can be upgraded as requirements evolve.”
GSE states that the program supports customers seeking to reduce the environmental impact associated with manufacturing and replacing industrial equipment. By extending useful equipment lifetime, the embodied environmental impact of manufacturing can be distributed over a longer period of productive use, while reducing demand for new materials and components. The initiative forms part of what the company describes as a broader focus on circularity and sustainable manufacturing, which it has explored through remanufacturing initiatives in the Netherlands.
As part of the wider Extended Life approach, GSE is developing a ‘Next Life’ program for selected dispensing systems, involving refurbishment and reintroduction of suitable systems to the market following full restoration, testing and performance validation. According to the company, refurbishment can provide a commercially attractive alternative to new equipment investment while reducing material usage and manufacturing impact.
“More companies are recognizing that sustainability and operational resilience go hand-in-hand,” Hummelen said. “This underscores the importance of a long-term approach to investing in ink logistics: extending the life of high-quality industrial equipment is often the smartest route environmentally, operationally and economically.”
GSE’s Extended Life Program will be highlighted at the Day of Remanufacturing, an event organized by the Dutch government to encourage circularity in manufacturing. The event is scheduled for June 18 in Naarden, the Netherlands, where the company will discuss lifecycle optimization and circular approaches to ink logistics equipment.


