Sustainable Packaging Coalition https://sustainablepackaging.org For People + The Planet Thu, 04 Jan 2024 15:27:15 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 https://sustainablepackaging.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/05/cropped-spc-logo-only-300x300-1-125x125.png Sustainable Packaging Coalition https://sustainablepackaging.org 32 32 Growth in New or Expanded Food Waste Recycling Programs Continued in 2023 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/12/12/growth-in-new-or-expanded-food-waste-recycling-programs-continued-in-2023/ Tue, 12 Dec 2023 16:05:59 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=63128

Now in its third year, SPC’s analysis of food waste recycling programs and processing facilities shows strong 2023 growth similar to past years

 

According to research from PMMI Business Intelligence, compostable packaging materials are predicted to increase by 15-16% over the next decade. Historically, acceptance of these materials has been stymied by a lack of widespread infrastructure in the U.S. to process both food waste and other compostable waste such as certified compostable packaging. 

Yet as more municipalities understand the urgency and climate-related benefits of diverting food waste from landfills, a new narrative is starting to emerge. The Sustainable Packaging Coalition has tracked the growth of expansion of food waste recycling programs for the past three years. This year, access to composting programs and facilities continued to grow, and the trend shows no signs of slowing down. 

In 2023, at least 35 towns, cities, and counties across 20 states increased residential access to composting programs for food scraps, and in some cases, compostable packaging. Across the country, at least 9 facilities grew their operations, retrofitted their processes to accept food waste or break material down more quickly, and experimented with new technologies. 

This is comparable to data from 2022 indicating that at least 38 towns, cities, and counties across 18 states increased residential access to composting programs for food scraps, and at least 13 facilities grew or expanded their composting operations. In 2021, data showed a similar story – at least 37 towns, cities, and counties across 19 states increased residential access to composting programs for food scraps, and in some cases, compostable packaging.

Read more about the new and/or expanded programs and facilities below. 

MUNICIPALITIES

FACILITIES

  1. Brattleboro, VT
  2. Shakopee, MN 
  3. Twin Cities, MN
  4. Oak Bluffs, IL 
  5. Falls Township, PA
  6. Rutgers University (NJ)
  7. Marshall University (WV)
  8. White Plains and Westchester County, NY
  9. Iowa City, IO
  10. Shelton, WA

BACKGROUND ANALYSIS

New 
  1. Chicago / more
  2. Los Angeles launches citywide organics service 
  3. Alexandria, VA 
  4. Oʻahu’, HI  / Manufactured compostable waste to be accepted in Oahu’s
  5. Durango, CO
  6. Bourne, MA 
  7. Riverhead, NY – Long Island’s food scrap dilemma 
  8. Newtown, CT 
  9. Bow, NH 
  10. Fairfax County, VA
  11. Charleston, SC
  12. Athens, GA
  13. City of Knoxville (TN): A comprehensive, multi-scale community composting program for residents, businesses, and nonprofits in Knoxville that will provide outlets, supplies, education, and ongoing support for three different scales of composting.
  14. Miami-Dade (FL) County: Two-year pilot project that aims to accelerate and scale the services of three small locally owned composting companies by expanding existing service capacity by 50% over one year, obtaining a renewable 18-month pilot project permit, developing a commercially viable compost product for use by Miami-Dade County
  15. East Hampton, NY
  16. Decatur, GA
  17. Columbus, OH
  18. Springfield, MO
  19. Nashville, TN piloting curbside compost program to reduce landfill waste 
  20. West Haven, CT 
  21. Princeton, NJ
  22. Washington County, OR
  23. Ann Arbor, MI 
  24. Middletown, CT 
  25. Troy, NY
  26. Toledo, OH / Toledo, OH 
Expansion 
  1. Boston, MA  / more Boston
  2. Frederick, MD 
  3. Aspen, CO 
  4. New York City
  5. DC To Pilot Curbside Composting Pickup This Summer | DCist 
  6. Baltimore, MD 
  7. San Diego, CA – San Diegans are recycling more than twice as much organic waste” Initial statistics comparing July 2022 to July 2023, the first month where nearly the whole city had green bins, show the amount of green recycling collected by the city increased from 3,100 tons to 6,900 tons.
  8. Bozeman, MT

NEW / EXPANDED INFRASTRUCTURE 

  1. Brattleboro, VT  / Grant will be used to expand compost facility in Brattleboro
  2. Shakopee, MN 
  3. Twin Cities, MN
  4. Oak Bluffs, IL 
  5. Falls Township, PA
  6. Rutgers University (NJ)
  7. Marshall University (WV)
  8. White Plains and Westchester County, NY
  9. Iowa City, IO
  10. Shelton, WA

SORTATION

KEY LEGISLATION

PREVIOUS YEARS

2022: At least 38 towns, cities, and counties across 18 states increased residential access to composting programs for food scraps, and in some cases, compostable packaging.  Across the country, at least 13 facilities grew their operations, retrofitted their processes to accept food waste or break material down more quickly, and experimented with new technologies. 

2021: At least 37 towns, cities, and counties across 19 states increased residential access to composting programs for food scraps, and in some cases, compostable packaging.

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International Negotiating Committee (INC) Develops Guidance, Criteria to Combat Plastic Pollution https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/11/08/international-negotiating-committee-inc-develops-guidance-criteria-to-combat-plastic-pollution/ Wed, 08 Nov 2023 19:42:34 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=63082

As delegates prepare to head to Nairobi for the third session of the International Negotiating Committee (INC), which is tasked with creating an International Legally Binding Instrument to address Plastic Pollution, it’s an opportune moment to reflect on the progress made so far. The INC has just introduced a Zero Draft for discussion at INC-3, which outlines various control measures related to the instrument’s objectives, offering one, two, or three options for each. This article delves into the implications of these options and their potential impact on the fight against plastic pollution.

 

plastic bottle sunrise

 

Among the control measures presented in the Zero Draft, two measures have three options, eight have two, and nine have just one. While it’s still early in the process, given the timeline set for developing the instrument, decisions may need to be made swiftly. However, certain procedural matters, like voting rules, could still pose challenges.

 

So, what can we infer from the Zero Draft and the options it presents? Most of the Control Measures that might (as per the Zero Draft) require Parties to take meaningful actions have more than one Option proposed. In these cases, Option 1 would, in conjunction with associated Annexes, prescribe targets and outcomes that Parties had to meet. The Option 2 (or Option 3 in the case of those Measures where 3 Options are proposed) variant leaves matters more open for Parties to set their own course: the Annexes would set out criteria against which they make their own assessment as to what they commit to in National Action Plans (NAPs). 

Stylised Representation of Implementation Gaps Under an Option 1 and an Option 2/3 Instrument

 

The difference between an ‘Option 1’ Instrument, and an Option 2 is potentially profound. Of course, the extent of ambition of Option 1, or the nature of criteria used under Option 2, could affect outcomes, but the Options seem more likely to tease out which UN Members are, and which are not, comfortable with targets and obligations being set within the Instrument. 

Drawing from personal experience, particularly in waste management planning, it seems reasonable to assume that there may be an implementation gap. The concern here is that the instrument’s objectives might be compromised if, in addition to such a gap between ‘intent’ and ‘achievement’, the ambition underpinning the intent is also uncertain. Opting for Option 2 (or 3, where relevant) as the basis for the agreed measures could lead to several challenges:

 

  1. Creating a significant administrative burden for Parties lacking institutional capacity.
  2. Heavy reliance on the content of NAPs and measures implemented by Parties, leading to uncertain outcomes.
  3. Consequent uncertainty in financing needs for implementing the Instrument.
  4. Delayed effectiveness, especially in the initial rounds of NAPs.
  5. Prolonged development time due to the duration for assessment and revision of NAPs, and the measures proposed therein.
  6. Increasing questions regarding the credibility of the Instrument.

 

Of particular concern to businesses is the prospect of Parties implementing a patchwork of bans, regulations, restrictions, targets, and design measures, based on their own assessments against the criteria in relevant Annexes. The lack of harmonization across these measures could result in a significant compliance challenge for businesses selling plastics and plastic products in various markets.

 

The Zero Draft is divided into Control Measures in Part II, Financing in Part III, and Action Plans in Part IV. Opting for an Option 1 instrument is likely to reduce the burden of preparing NAPs and their required content. 

As important, there is a need to enable discussions on Part II (control measures) and Part III (financing) to occur concurrently, aligning the two areas for a more cohesive approach. For example, extended producer responsibility, as discussed in Part III, can be considered a source of funding for quality end-of-life management, which is covered in Part II. Similarly, if the intent is to reduce primary plastic production (Part II), a global plastic pollution fee (Part III) or an alternative economic instrument could be a driving force. Part II also addresses cleaning up hotspots, but it doesn’t establish a clear link to the necessary financing.

 

These crucial links might be overlooked if contact groups discuss financing and control measures independently, or in parallel, as they did in Paris, and are set to do in Nairobi. A coordinated effort that considers that control measures may also be financing measures, and vice versa, is essential to achieving the Instrument’s objectives effectively and efficiently.

 

In summary, an Instrument heavily reliant on ‘Option 2 (and 3)’ type measures leaves too much to chance to make a significant impact within the desired timeframe. We strongly urge delegates to consider developing an ‘Option 1’ style instrument, which would offer some harmonization across measures implemented by Parties, aiding businesses in formulating their strategies. This approach also ensures that well-designed measures can provide the requisite financing, an opportunity that should not be missed in the fight against plastic pollution. 

 

Dr Dominic Hogg of Equanimator is working alongside Reloop, an international non-profit organisation leading on the development of a circular economy – see www.reloopplatform.org.

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In Search of the Cleanest Compost: Highlights from BPI’s Inaugural Summit https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/11/07/in-search-of-the-cleanest-compost-highlights-from-bpis-inaugural-summit/ Tue, 07 Nov 2023 20:28:43 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=63077

Last month the Biodegradable Products Institute (BPI) held its first-ever event in Minneapolis, Minnesota to spur action within the compostable packaging sphere. Various stakeholders from material manufacturers, composters, brand owners, legislators, compost certifiers, to local and national municipality representatives were in attendance and ready to participate during the 2-day summit.

Attendees were able to learn from 10 sessions featuring leaders in the composting space. SPC staff walked away with two key takeaways: (1.) By educating and motivating the public about composting, we will be able to (2.) successfully minimize contamination, cleaning the composting stream to produce a high quality output.

Here’s what we learned…

Compost Contamination

 

 “We can’t make a high quality end product if low-quality compost is what’s coming in.” – Dustin Montey

 

One of the recurring themes throughout the Summit was the challenge of contamination. During the Compostable Packaging Partnerships session, the Compost Council of Canada highlighted contamination as a large issue composters face. This is not unique to Canadian infrastructure; several US composters who attended the conference shared the same sentiments around contamination from non-compostable packaging materials.

 

“oxodegradable, biodegradable, eco-friendly, and all-natural are not standards and can be very misleading for consumers” – Erin Skelly

 

Erin Skelly and Dustin Montey of the SMSC Organics Recycling Facility discussed how greenwashing and lack of consumer education can easily lead to contamination. A non-compostable product may appear compostable based on the product’s messaging, color, or look, leading consumers to place non-compostable items in their compost bins. There may even be compostable messaging used on items that have not passed any certification, which can exacerbate the contamination issue. During their presentation, Skelly and Montey stated “oxodegradable, biodegradable, eco-friendly, and all-natural are not standards and can be very misleading for consumers” when seen on packages. [To learn more, read SPC’s position statement on greenwashing here.]

Difficult to identify, poorly-labeled compostables can also be part of the problem if they fail to display clear compostability indicators like certification logos. To minimize potential contamination, the current standard practice is to pick out non-BPI certified items, since it is hard to verify the compostability of non-certified products. Without a standardized identifier like the BPI label or the How2Compost label, both the consumer and the hauler will have difficulty recognizing what can be composted versus what needs to be landfilled to mitigate contamination.

 

“We spend a lot of time screening regular plastic bags out of the compost stream” – Tim Dewey-Mattia

 

Tim Dewey-Mattia of Napa Recycling and Waste Services reported spending a lot of time screening regular plastic bags out of their compost. Waste Service workers open every compost shipment that arrives in compostable bags to make sure the organic matter inside can be successfully composted. Collectors have noticed that people will put non-compostable items in these bags simply due to a lack of knowledge or caring.

So how do we improve the system?

 

Improving the System Through Education & Motivation

 

To combat contamination we need to go to the root of the problem –  education and motivation. In the Compostable Packaging Myths session, composting representatives from SMSC, City of St. Louis Park, and Organicycle agreed that education for people and companies about compost contamination would be a successful way to engage in positive behavior change.

 

 “Compost is a starter engine for regeneration.” – Finian Makepeace

 

The Minneapolis Organics Recycling Program has piloted a way to keep its residents accountable for properly disposing of food waste and other compostables. During their project, they had field staff look into residents’ curbside compost bins to see if they contained contaminated materials. If so, the field staff were to place a tag on the resident’s bin with an explanation of what was considered contamination and why their bin was rejected from pick-up. If a second offense occurs, the Minneapolis Organics Recycling Program follows up with a letter in the mail reiterating why the bin was rejected. If the contamination continues, the final course of action may result in the curbside bin being removed. This pilot was a great way to personally engage with people, make them aware of what is considered compost contamination, and then provide guidance on how to change their behavior in the future.

 

“It’s helpful to want to work with people in our tent instead of taking aim at them.” – Susan Antler

 

SPC staff found BPI’s first Summit highly informative and a great meeting ground for stakeholders throughout the composting supply chain. As Susan Antler from the Compost Council of Canada said, it’s helpful to “want to work with people in our tent instead of taking aim at them.” Compostable packaging events like this are a great way to bring awareness to what other organizations are trying, have learned, and what to do better to create contamination-free compost.

For more information on BPI and their excellent work, check out their website, here.

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Flexible Film Recycling: Collection Methods of Today and the Future https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/10/10/flexible-film-recycling-collection-methods-of-today-and-the-future/ Tue, 10 Oct 2023 15:50:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/10/10/62926-copy/

Flexible film packages are ubiquitous in consumer’s lives today. From buying food at the grocery store to ordering furniture online, there is a good chance at least some part of the package is a plastic bag, pouch, or wrap. Despite its prevalence, recycling this material remains challenged. For the majority of the US population, curbside bins are a familiar system to putting recyclable items to be collected. However, when it comes to flexible films, most of us cannot (and should not!) put this material type into our curbside bins. Instead, there are options like Store Drop-off and specialty collection programs that were developed to successfully recover flexible films.

 

Highlighted during the SPC Advance 2023 session, “The Role of Specialty Recycling Programs as a solution to Hard-to-Recycle Packaging”, were speciality collection programs designed to capture and properly recycle flexible films. While these collection programs are not widespread yet, some communities may have access to centers that accept hard to recycle materials for a fee. To find a location near you, research your local municipality services for information on your specific recycling options. 

 

Other individual localities or businesses may collect challenging materials through partnerships with organizations like TerraCycle. Consumers around urban areas may have access to pick-up subscription services to collect items that cannot go into the curbside bin, such as a program like Ridwell whose top collection categories are polyethylene (PE) plastic films and multilayer plastic (flexibles made of a variety of materials that may or may not include PE). If you have access to a speciality collection program, these are great for giving new use to multilayer films and keeping them out of landfills.

 

During SPC Advance, attendees heard from Dow and Waste Management (WM) in their session “Advancing residential recycling for hard-to-recycle plastic films through a bold new collaboration” where they highlighted their partnership to pilot a new project focused on collecting flexible films curbside. Over the next 3 to 4 years, up to 8% of households in the US will have access to this pilot. Dow and WM are hopeful for the success of this program as it utilizes an already familiar system, the convenient curbside collection process, meeting consumers where they are and avoiding asking consumers to take additional steps to recycle flexible films. This pilot aims to address the problems that currently prevent flexible films from being collected curbside.

 

Today, flexibles remain a contaminant in Material Recovery Facilities (MRFs). The equipment at MRFs are designed to sort rigid materials and can become jammed by flexibles, creating slow downs and potentially lowering yields of rigid recyclable material. Additional equipment to specifically capture flexibles has been trialed in various MRFs but has not been widely adopted due to inefficiencies and lack of connection from MRFs to end markets.

 

Speciality recycling programs help close the gap to end markets by bringing flexible materials to reclaimers to create new items, such as construction materials like composite boards. While the system is not perfected yet, the progress of these programs to keep more materials out of landfills is a worthy endeavor. Currently, the biggest barriers with specialty collection programs are their size and accessibility; they are not available at scale and some even have a subscription cost associated with them. But there is good news–one type of  flexible film, polyethylene (PE) film, has a free and readily accessible pathway to recycling for most Americans; the Store Drop-off program.

 

As we learn about new methods of collecting PE film, and until pilots graduate to widespread systems, it is important to keep supporting the Store Drop-off stream to ensure these materials remain out of landfills. Store Drop-off programs exist where retailers voluntarily set up collection bins in individual stores and this is available to the majority of Americans. Continue to put clean, dry PE films in Store Drop-off bins and look for the How2Recycle label if you’re unsure where your flexible film should go.

 

For more information on how to recycle flexible films and other materials check out How2Recycle.

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Our Position on Problematic Materials https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/09/15/problematic-materials/ Fri, 15 Sep 2023 19:34:05 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/09/15/policy-copy/

SPC’s mission is to bring together sustainable packaging stakeholders to catalyze actionable improvements to packaging systems and lend an authoritative voice on issues related to packaging sustainability.

SPC has engaged with the U.S. Plastics Pact since its inception as an activator and as a participant in multiple workstreams. The Problematic Materials workstream worked with Pact Activators to “take measures to eliminate 11 problematic and unnecessary resins, components, and formats by 2025 in order to accelerate progress toward a circular economy for plastic packaging in the United States”.

 

 

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SPC’s 2024 Innovator Awards to Highlight Recovery & Systems Change Innovation https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/09/12/62926/ Tue, 12 Sep 2023 16:13:08 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=62926

Since 2017, the Sustainable Packaging Coalition has been recognizing meaningful contributions and advancements towards more sustainable packaging through its annual SPC Innovator Awards. As a long-standing awards platform celebrating advancements in sustainability, the Awards have showcased the impressive efforts of more than thirty organizations. 

In 2024, the SPC Innovator Awards will look to celebrate innovations in packaging materials and designs with the Innovation in a Product or Material category. In addition to this longstanding category, two new categories will shine a spotlight on innovations in the broader recovery and packaging ecosystems. 

The introduction of the two new categories is intended to accelerate our industry’s progress on sustainable packaging. As the waste and climate crises stand at our doors, it is time to encourage and celebrate more ambitious collaborations across the supply chain. To meet this critical moment, the SPC believes it is time for more than improvements to package designs. Today, true innovation lies in transforming how the packaging industry engages with recovery infrastructure, educates consumers, and tackles broader sustainability challenges head-on. 

 

Today, true innovation lies in transforming how the packaging industry engages with recovery infrastructure, educates consumers, and tackles broader sustainability challenges head-on.

 

Submissions will open on October 11, 2023 for the 2024 awards cycle. SPC Member Companies with innovations in the following three categories are encouraged to submit their work: 

 

1. Innovation in a product or material

This category will recognize breakthroughs in the procurement and use of more sustainable materials. This includes new materials and novel uses of materials in challenging applications, as well as improvements to conventional materials and sourcing practices. 

See examples of past innovations in sourcing practices, design optimization, and recoverable packaging here – https://sustainablepackaging.org/engagement/spc-innovator-awards/award-winners/ 

 

2. NEW – Innovation in a recovery technology or practice

New for the 2024 awards cycle, this category is intended to recognize innovations that are increasing the quantity or quality of recovered packaging. This includes celebrating partnerships whose aim is to advance recovery practices and increase consumer participation in recycling and composting, as well as recognition for efforts to create end markets for difficult-to-recycle materials. 

 

3. NEW – Innovation in an overall packaging system

New for the 2024 awards cycle, this category will recognize breakthroughs that reduce the need for single-use packaging, such as through reuse and refill offerings. It will also recognize design improvements that solve broader sustainability challenges, such as the prevention of food waste through improved packaging formats. The SPC is also looking to recognize efforts to educate consumers and drive specific behaviors, such as through advancements in labeling paired with education campaigns. Finally, this category intends to recognize breakthroughs that radically break the mold of a current packaging category through wholesale redesign. 

 

With a realigned focus on celebrating companies’ efforts to directly engage with recovery infrastructure and elevate the sustainability of the package-product system, the SPC hopes to catalyze more rapid systems change in the sustainable packaging space.

Submissions for our 2024 SPC Innovator Awards will open October 11th, 2023.

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CleanPackage: Supporting Safe + Circular Materials for Packaging https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/08/01/cleanpackage-supporting-safe-circular-materials-for-packaging/ Tue, 01 Aug 2023 15:01:56 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=62823

As companies work towards goals to make their packaging recyclable or compostable, and use more recycled materials as feedstock, hazardous chemicals are emerging as an increasingly relevant challenge. While compliance with food contact and other regulations applicable to chemicals in packaging has always been important, we are now seeing that the choice of chemicals in the packaging design phase can have an impact well beyond the limited lifespan of the package, and affects its ability to be used as recycled input for new packaging materials or products, or as feedstock for compost. To help companies tackle this challenge, the Sustainable Packaging Coalition, a project of GreenBlue, is excited to announce the launch of CleanPackage, a new shared registry of verified safer alternative packaging materials that will serve as a resource for SPC members working to improve the safety and circular potential of their packaging materials.

Different companies are at different stages on their safer chemistry journeys. The first step is simply transparency: understanding what substances are in a product. The second is screening materials to ensure that they don’t have known chemicals of concern that might be restricted by regulations, on restricted substance lists (RSLs), or on other authoritative lists. While these are important first steps, they don’t ensure that all substances in a material are truly safer for human and environmental health throughout the material’s life cycle. Suppliers and manufacturers trying to do that will need to move on to the next level: full chemical hazard assessments of all chemicals present in a material. This level of assessment can feed into certification programs, which ultimately make it simpler for buyers to specify safer packaging.

But full chemical hazard assessments aren’t easy to come by. It’s a lot easier to prove that something is hazardous than to prove that something is safe. Chemical hazard assessments look at a wide range of human and environmental health endpoints. If a substance is a carcinogen, for example, it’s easy to say that it is not inherently safe. But alternatives may have data gaps that make it hard to know for sure that they are truly safer.

 


It takes a lot more information to prove that a chemical is inherently safe than it does to prove that it is toxic. Just knowing that a chemical is a known carcinogen or that it causes skin sensitization can be enough to rule it out as a good candidate or product application. But to be sure that it is inherently benign for its intended use means that data gaps must be filled. A lack of hazard data does not mean that a chemical is inherently benign.

— Lauren Heine, Ph.D., Co-Founder and Director of Science and Data Integrity, ChemFORWARD


 

ChemFORWARD is changing this by creating broad access to chemical hazard data and illuminating safer alternatives. They provide access to trusted comprehensive data, utilizing a shared data repository designed to leverage existing chemical hazard assessments, reduce costs, and increase consistency of reviews. This is a great way to manage information for individual chemicals. But companies don’t usually buy chemicals by their chemical name and CAS number– they buy trade name materials from their suppliers, which may contain mixtures of chemicals, and in many cases, the exact composition is a trade secret. We realized that there is a need to bridge the gap between hazard data that may exist for individual chemicals and these trade name materials.

That’s where CleanPackage comes in. Building on the model used by GreenBlue’s CleanGredients in the cleaning products industry, CleanPackage is a registry where companies in the packaging supply chain can find trade name materials that have been verified through ChemFORWARD SAFER and other credible programs, including Cradle to Cradle Certified (Material Health Gold or higher) and GreenScreen Certified (Gold or higher). Each of these programs have rigorous disclosure requirements, and rely on third-party assessors and chemical hazard assessments.

ChemFORWARD’s shared repository of chemical hazard assessments lowers cost, increases consistency, and speeds the screening of trade name materials to enable the rapid scaling of the materials registry.

CleanPackage is designed to fill the gap in chemical hazard data for packaging materials. Through this program, suppliers can demonstrate human and environmental safety, and can build trust with their customers based on a rigorous, third-party-verified process. Confidential business information is protected, but purchasers can be assured that they are sourcing truly safer alternative materials for packaging, and through shared data, safer alternatives become more accessible to everyone.

What’s next? We’ll be working on adding materials to the registry – companies can submit qualified products for consideration here. We’ll also be creating more resources to help companies choose safer materials in packaging. We’d love to hear from members: where are your biggest challenges? Are there particular chemistries that you’re having a hard time phasing out? What safer alternatives do you need? Most of all, we hope that members will use CleanPackage to support their goals of using safe and circular materials in their packaging.

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Our Position on Packaging Policy https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/07/14/policy/ Fri, 14 Jul 2023 17:57:45 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=710

SPC’s mission is to bring together sustainable packaging stakeholders to catalyze actionable improvements to packaging systems and lend an authoritative voice on issues related to packaging sustainability. We support packaging policy as one tool that will accelerate our mission.
Our role is of an agnostic subject matter expert and educational resource that helps our members and other stakeholders understand packaging-related policies so they are informed and can participate actively in packaging policy conversations. We believe that engagement of informed stakeholders has the best potential to increase the effectiveness of legislative solutions.

 

SPC’s Use of the Term Policy for This Position Statement

In the context of the SPC, packaging policy is a term referring to political efforts from governments, corporations, or other organizations working in the sustainable packaging field on a global scale.

  • Overarching laws, regulations, administrative actions, and other decision-making processes that an organization or
    government follows or creates.
  • A mechanism to reach goals or desired outcomes at various governance levels within governments and organizations.

 

Scope

Based on our current membership concentration, we primarily focus on the United States and Canada while staying aware of Europe and international policies that may inform this primary focus.

The scope of packaging policy related work for the SPC encompasses any policy where the primaryrole addresses the packaging life cycle. Policies can be complex and multi-layered. The SPC limits efforts to packaging life cycle policies as this is core to the organization’s mission. To expand, the packaging life cycle includes the sourcing, manufacturing, distribution, use, and recovery of a package. Policies that fall outside this life cycle scope are acknowledged for
awareness but not incorporated into our direct work.

All work of the SPC must be relevant to current or future programs and member interest with the goal to help translate legislation, keep members informed, and encourage dialogue between all stakeholders in the supply and value chain.

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Our Position on Greenwashing https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/06/05/greenwashing/ Mon, 05 Jun 2023 17:58:18 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=713

The SPC recommends a definition of greenwashing to enable more fruitful conversations about environmental marketing, on-pack ecolabeling, and consumer education. In order for greenwashing to be effectively combatted, there must be a specific definition of what constitutes greenwashing. The sustainability field does not currently have a single widely accepted and specific definition of greenwashing.
Rather, we have vague or overly broad descriptions. Consensus around the definition of greenwashing presented herein will enable more fruitful conversations about what counts as adequate support for environmental marketing claims. Additionally, the SPC recommends coupling on-pack eco-labeling with other modes of consumer education around sustainability initiatives. The SPC’s rationale is outlined below.

 

    1. The SPC defines greenwashing as, “using accurate environmental facts to tell an inaccurate environmental impact story.” This definition is aligned with Mirriam Webster’s approach of defining greenwashing as, “the act or practice of making a product, policy, activity, etc. appear to be more environmentally friendly or less environmentally damaging than it really is.”
      The rhetorical argument framework of claims, support, and warrants is useful in assessing environmental marketing. This approach to defining greenwashing as a way of slanting how an environmental message is perceived is important because at the core, advertising is making an argument on behalf of a product. A claim is what is being asserted by the marketer, support is what data or evidence would back up the claim, and a warrant is the underlying reasoning that links the supporting evidence to the claim.
      An environmental claim considered to be greenwashing under this frame is not an inaccurate claim; rather, it is one that lacks rigor in the supporting evidence and/or relies on implicit warrants to persuade a consumer rather than clearly-stated compelling evidence. Overly broad claims that require the consumer to ‘fill in the blanks’ for why the claim is a good product attribute are relying on implicit warrants to persuade rather than a stated warrant. Greenwashing enables the marketer to avoid making a claim that would not be substantiated by generally accepted methodologies such as life cycle assessment, while still benefiting from a consumer making that logical leap.
    2. The term ‘greenwashing’ should not be used to refer to the use of false environmental claims in marketing; this is false advertising. Greenwashing is distinct from false advertising due to the use of accurate environmental facts to tell an inaccurate environmental impact story. Rather, the term greenwashing should be used to refer to the strategic use of certain claims, or absence of other relevant information, that presents an inaccurate view of the entire environmental impact. This is because strategies to prevent false claims and misdirection through ambiguous claims are different.
      This distinction between greenwashing and false advertising does not condone false advertising. If a message is known to be demonstrably false and is still used in advertising, that is morally wrong, demonstrates a lack of business ethics, and most importantly is illegal in the United States, Canada, the European Union, China, and many other jurisdictions. False advertising, whether environmental in nature or not, must be avoided.
    3. The SPC recommends pursuing independent substantiation for environmental claims. To avoid greenwashing, environmental marketing should include:
      • A stated warrant that links relevant supporting information to a specific and truthful claim,
      • Any necessary qualifications, and
      • Verification from an appropriate and credible independent organization.

      To move forward with on-pack consumer education, marketers interested in avoiding greenwashing should use thirdparty certification or verification programs that help to establish substantiation for all claims. There are robust certification
      programs for recycled content, material health, fiber sourcing, compostability and other common environmental marketing
      claims. There are also programs, such as the How2Recycle, OPRL, and APCO, that verify on-pack recyclability messaging for
      specific markets.

    To learn more, contact spcinfo@greenblue.org.

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The Road to Decarbonization Will Likely Be Lined By Trees https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/25/the-road-to-decarbonization-will-likely-be-lined-by-trees/ Thu, 25 May 2023 00:30:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=766

At SPC Impact 2023, Jason Bell with Sustainability Solutions and David Brabham from Georgia-Pacific took to the stage to talk about Decarbonizing Paper Production.  As the title suggests, there is a clear opportunity for the industry to reduce greenhouse gas emissions resulting in lower carbon emissions for packaging. The speakers provided their perspectives on what we may see for both near-term and long-term transitions.

In his opening remarks, Brabham framed three supply chain levers for driving change:

  •   Raw Materials
  •   Manufacturing
  •   End of Life

RAW MATERIALS

Regarding raw materials, there have been numerous studies that correlate a demand for forest products with increasing support for well-managed forests. In other words, landowners need markets for whatever is grown on their land – and if there is no demand for wood products, they may choose to grow other crops, or to develop land for commercial or residential purposes. In regard to other renewable fiber sources, most stakeholders agree that agricultural residues (like bagasse from sugar cane) are responsible choices for fiber because those residues would otherwise be wasted. However, Brabham pointed out that “We shouldn’t be replacing forests with other purpose-grown crops.”

MANUFACTURING

As for the manufacturing footprint of papermaking – both speakers agreed that for the next ten years or so, the industry will continue investing in opportunities to increase efficiency (using less energy) as well as fuel switching to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. The industry has long led other sectors in the use of biobased fuels (primarily wood residuals like bark and black liquor). Bell suggested that a cultural change is needed from the ground up similar to the longstanding efforts on workplace safety. “Like safety, we need to see a cultural shift around greenhouse gas reductions. Operators see data on safety, uptime and quality on the shop room floor every day”, Brabham explained. By providing operators visibility to key performance indicators like energy and emissions per unit of production, operators could see the effects of their work in real-time – much like they do now for safety and other performance indicators.

Looking further out, Bell commented that new technologies like electric boilers and heat pumps will come into play. And Brabham noted that the industry is in a unique position related to carbon sequestration. While some industries may look at offsetting or sequestration in hopes of achieving carbon neutrality for fossil fuels– it is conceivable that the pulp and paper industry could achieve a carbon-negative status by sequestering emissions from biofuels.

END OF LIFE

Regarding end-of-life, the industry has a strong track record of recycling and use of recycled fiber. However, there are still millions of tons of paper-based packaging and food service products ending up in US landfills every year. In order to recapture some of this fiber, Georgia Pacific recently commercialized a new technology called Juno, based on a massive autoclave, that allows for the recovery of paper fiber from commercial and residential waste streams. The process has also proven that it can handle challenging products such as poly-coated papers and materials with high food residue. While the autoclave uses higher levels of energy than traditional sortation processes, life cycle studies have shown that the process does result in a significant net reduction of emissions – while also recovering additional recyclables (e.g. cans and bottles) from the waste stream.

In short, the pulp and paper industry continues to drive efficiency improvements, adopt fuel switching, and support sustainable forest management. While the industry is quite mature, we also continue to see technology advancements, like Juno. Looking ahead, it is conceivable that with the advent of sequestration technology papermaking could become carbon negative. Indeed, it seems there is a road to reducing the emissions associated with industrial manufacturing; and that road will be lined with trees.

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Digital print: How far do we still have to go? https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/23/digital-print-how-far-do-we-still-have-to-go/ Tue, 23 May 2023 17:14:32 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=660

When it comes to digital printing, how far have we come and what can the industry do to take advantage of the many benefits these technologies offer? Victoria Hattersley reports.

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Flexible film recycling project debuts in Canada https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/23/flexible-film-recycling-project-debuts-in-canada/ Tue, 23 May 2023 16:56:12 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=656

A number of circularity organizations have collaborated to launch PRFLEXan effort to improve flexible plastic recycling in Canada. 

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GreenBlue’s Commentary on the FTC Green Guides  https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/23/greenblues-commentary-on-the-ftc-green-guides/ Tue, 23 May 2023 00:39:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=770

“We cannot create meaningful, impactful change at scale and at the speed we require without everyone.” 

 

In an ongoing attempt to inspire an inclusive environment, we are proud to have given a seat at the table to representatives from each and every one of our programs. Together, we worked holistically to compile our commentary for the FTC Green Guides public comment period. To provide transparency in the work we do and firmly believe in, linked below is GreenBlue’s commentary that was submitted to the FTC.

 

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Perspectives from Early Adopters of the RMS https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/22/perspectives-from-early-adopters-of-the-rms/ Mon, 22 May 2023 19:14:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=740

The Recycled Material Standard (RMS) has seen a rapid increase in certified participants and activity over the last few months. At the recent SPC Impact conference in Austin, TX, the RMS team highlighted new certification resources and RMS participants shared the stage to discuss their successes in leveraging different RMS tools.

Perspectives from Early Adopters

An overflowing room of attendees listened as Cherish Changala of Revolution Plastics, Richa Desai of Graham Packaging, and Martha Issa of Veritiv shared insights into their companies’ experiences with RMS. A panel discussion explored the three companies’ experiences as early adopters of strategic avenues to utilize the standard, including traditional recycled content claims supported by a chain of custody, mass balance allocation, and Attributes of Recycled Content (ARC) trading.

“It was so comprehensive. It’s a new way of looking at certification.”

Revolution was among the first companies to achieve RMS certification and has used average content claims for certified post-consumer and post-industrial materials. While Revolution has been certified to other standards in the past, Changala said the company wanted to be an early adopter of the RMS because “it was so comprehensive. It’s a new way of looking at [certification].”  She noted that certification is important to Revolution because it helps their customers feel confident in their products.

Graham Packaging is now working with the newly-accredited certification body DNV Business Assurance USA to pursue certification for two facilities in York, Pennsylvania. Desai noted a few features of the RMS that have helped the process go smoothly. Graham was able to use the new RMS toolkit to ease the burden of preparing for certification, unlike other certification processes that required the assistance of a consultant. Compared to other standards, the opportunity for multi-site certification via RMS has also helped reduce the audit burden, so the company doesn’t have to audit every site every year.

Like Revolution, Graham sees the value in certifying both post-consumer and post-industrial materials. Desai noted that post-industrial materials can help customers with goals to reduce virgin plastic use while maintaining the quality and performance of packaging.

Graham is the first RMS participant to pursue the use of mass balance allocation.  According to Desai, there are a few key advantages. First, mass balance gives Graham the flexibility to use materials processed through mechanical recycling and advanced recycling. Second, the company hopes to leverage non-food-grade PCR into food-grade applications. Given the lack of supply of food-grade PCR, especially for polyolefins, this flexibility will help Graham’s customers meet their recycled material use targets. Mass balance will also give Graham the flexibility to match its specific investments in the use of recycled materials with its customers’ variable goals.

“We now have EPR as an instrument to drive investment in recycling [collection and sortation]  infrastructure.  I truly believe that we need mass balance to increase the amount of PCR in products.”

Desai pointed out that PCR cannot be incorporated into packaging overnight – it takes investment, infrastructure, testing, and more to incorporate PCR, especially in food-grade applications. Graham’s customers have different goals and different willingness to pay for recycled materials, especially as new regulatory requirements are being put in place, so mass balance will enable Graham to meet those requirements while efficiently managing its inventory and capital investments.  Desai sees mass balance as key to advancing the use of recycled materials: “We now have EPR as an instrument to drive investment in recycling [collection and sortation]  infrastructure. I truly believe that we need mass balance to increase the amount of PCR in products.”

“For me, it was very easy to buy into the concept, because I had in mind that the end goal is to invest in infrastructure for more recycled content.”

Meanwhile, as a distributor of packaging, Veritiv was excited about the ability to create a pipeline for recycled content without becoming certified directly through the RMS. When Issa first heard about ARCs, the new environmental commodity created by the RMS to support investments in recycling, she thought the idea was brilliant. “For me, it was very easy to buy into the concept, because I had in mind that the end goal is to invest in infrastructure for more recycled content.”  The bigger challenge was to explain the new concept to stakeholders within her company.  Two of the main concerns they expressed were: how can you be sure that investments in ARCs are truly investments in recycling infrastructure, and how can you be sure that claims based on ARCs aren’t greenwashing? For Issa and her colleagues, the RMS was able to provide that assurance. Since every ARC is tied to materials reprocessed by a specific audited project that must meet additional criteria, Veritiv was assured that their investment was credible.

“This is not about offsetting or buying our way out.  We need recycled content, there is not enough. This is a step forward to doing that.”

The RMS also gives guidelines on marketing claims so that ARC purchasers like Veritiv can avoid greenwashing. Ultimately, the holy grail is to have more post-consumer recycled plastic, and Issa sees investment in ARCs as a step on the path to get there: “This is not about offsetting or buying our way out. We need recycled content, there is not enough. This is a step forward to doing that.”

These companies’ experiences highlight the importance of the flexibility and adaptability of the RMS, even as it provides robust assurance of the validity of claims. By offering different pathways, RMS can assure validity of both post-consumer and post-industrial content claims, give companies the flexibility to meet their goals through mass balance accounting and facilitate scalable investments in new recycling infrastructure through ARC trading. With the new resources that are now available to participants, these opportunities will become accessible to even more companies that are working to advance the use of recycled materials.

New Resources for Companies Considering Certification

Dr. Laura Thompson kicked off the first RMS session by introducing the RMS participant toolkit developed with the support of McDonald’s. The session helped companies considering certification think through the process, answering questions like:

  • What key internal stakeholders need to be involved in the certification process?
  • How might a company align their certification approach with their strategy?
  • How should a company define the intended scope of their certificate, including covered sites, products, and types of claims?
  • How can the scope of a certificate evolve and grow over time as companies and their supply chain partners make progress on their recycled material goals?

Thompson’s session also touched on some less obvious certification opportunities such as the ability to certify post-industrial scrap (and potentially track any post-consumer content that may be present) and use mass balance for all types of recycling – not just chemical – offering flexibility and simpler inventory management.

Beyond the toolkit, the RMS team has other resources for current and prospective participants, including one-page brochures suitable for sales trading and educating customers on the RMS and a brief video on the often-confusing topic of mass balance allocation.

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Climate tech needs a lesson in circularity https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/17/climate-tech-needs-a-lesson-in-circularity/ Wed, 17 May 2023 17:16:58 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=662

An equitable path to the clean economy will require far more attention to where we “dig up” lithium, cobalt and other critically important minerals.

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How to Leverage LCA to Push Sustainability Goals Forward https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/15/how-to-leverage-lca-to-push-sustainability-goals-forward/ Mon, 15 May 2023 19:13:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=739

SPC Impact 2023 opened with an afternoon series of sessions dedicated to life cycle assessment (LCA) and its use in sustainable packaging design and evaluation. Drs. Milena Rangelov from Watershed and Mariya Absar from Quantis and Alison Crawley from Trayak shared insights into LCA findings, best practices in International Organization for Standardization (ISO) compliance, and what metrics to look for alongside LCA when making holistic sustainable packaging decisions.

A Brief Review of LCA

 

LCA  is the established methodology for evaluating the environmental impacts of a product or service over its life cycle. While the life cycle can be segmented into different sections, the methodology is at its strongest when it includes as many segments as possible.

Traditional models of a life cycle include; cradle to gate: which measures manufacturing impacts, cradle to grave: which measures manufacturing through the distribution, retail, use, and end-of-life phases, or cradle to cradle: which adds the impacts of recovering materials into future life cycles.

How is LCA used in developing sustainable packaging?

 

Data provided by Dr. Milena Rangelow’s SPC Impact presentation

Data provided by Dr. Milena Rangelow’s SPC Impact presentation

One of the most valuable attributes of LCA is the ability to objectively evaluate material alternatives. Frequently that results in comparisons of plastics to non-plastic alternatives. Dr. Ranglov’s presentation focused on presenting a summary of the results from a comprehensive review of plastic conducted by Vital Metrics. The review included 144 papers published between 2000-2021.

Packaging was the most prevalent of the industries represented. While other sectors were included, due to the audience of SPC, this review will only present the packaging results.

The results indicated that packaging was the largest consumer of non-fiber primary plastic materials and that it was also the sector with the shortest product use cycles. While other industries use plastic, the ephemeral nature of packaging makes its impacts very different from the impacts of plastic in durable applications.

The factors revealed to be most important to include in LCAs assessing plastics in packaging are use pattern, weight, geographical context, and waste management practices. Likewise, the impact categories included in the evaluation in the LCA are important to the ultimate results and conclusions of the studies. Some gaps that were identified were the inclusion of additives in the assessments, the impacts of microplastics and plastic leakage, and the availability of high-quality regional data on production and end-of-life in geographies outside of Europe and North America.

Some advice on LCA best practice

 

In the session on ISO compliance, Crawley presented guidance on how to follow best practices in conducting and communicating LCA results. The presentation focused on ISO 14040: 2006 Environmental management – Life Cycle Assessment – Principles and Framework, ISO 14044: 2006 Environmental management – Life Cycle Assessment – Requirements and Guidelines, and ISO 14071:2014 Environmental management – Life Cycle Assessment – Critical review processes and reviewer competencies.

ISO compliance and the critical review process have key benefits. Critical review enhances the credibility of the LCA, improves understanding, pressure tests the LCA models, increases transparency, and supports comparative assertions to the public. However, it is also important to note that critical review does not certify the results of the LCA or result in the endorsement of one product over another.

Pushing sustainability goals forward

 

In response to some of the limitations of LCA, supplemental methodologies have been developed to use alongside LCA to aid in making more holistic packaging decisions. Moving beyond the carbon footprint tunnel vision was the focus of Dr. Absar’s presentation.

Holistic sustainability goals are metrics-based, multi-indicator, and context-specific. The key limitations noted by Dr. Absar to an LCA only approach included:

  • Plastic leakage: a metric based on mismanaged waste in each market, which determines leakage into other environmental compartments
  • Circularity score: Assesses the raw materials inputs i.e. virgin, renewable, or recycled content, and outputs, including recyclability, renewable content, and leakage
  • Deforestation risk: Some bio-based plastics may contribute to deforestation and other resource depletion
  • Recyclability score: Is the packaging designed to be recyclable?

Dr. Absar presented The SPHERE framework as a strategy for building upon traditional LCA to address these limitations, which can be applied to assess packaging from a portfolio perspective, or as an eco-design tool.

Life Cycle Assessment alone is not enough

 

It’s important to remember that sustainability includes environmental and social and economic impacts. LCA is a methodology for analyzing the environmental impacts of a product over its life cycle, rather than at a single point in time. While LCA is commonly used in the packaging industry to try to measure and quantify the environmental impacts of products, fundamentally, LCA is a measure of environmental impacts, not a measure of sustainability.

Sustainability is more than just these environmental impacts, however. Sustainable development is defined as meeting the needs of the present, without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. The broadness of this definition is the strength of the concept. Anything that prevents present and future generations from being able to meet their needs is unsustainable. While it is true that environmental issues, such as climate change, ocean plastic pollution, and deforestation all compromise the ability of future generations to meet their needs, social and economic factors do as well.

In addition to environmental impacts, there needs to be focus on social and economic justice for packaging to truly be sustainable. Sustainability teams need to be literate in methods for tracking and measuring progress in social and socio-economic impact categories as well as environmental impact categories. Other tools, such as Product Social Impact Assessment, can and should be used alongside LCA to avoid unintended social consequences in pursuit of lower environmental impacts.

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Collaboration and Coordinated Innovation: The Essentials to Tackling Packaging Waste https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/12/collaboration-and-coordinated-innovation-the-essentials-to-tackling-packaging-waste/ Fri, 12 May 2023 19:09:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=737

A glimpse into the Balcones Resources tour that took place at SPC Impact 2023; what it showed us, and how, to succeed, we must collaborate to tackle packaging waste at scale.  

Since 1994, Balcones Resources has worked to tackle the waste conundrum in innovative ways, largely as a result of fostering meaningful partnerships with their customers, from small business to municipalities and everyone in between. Originating in Austin, Texas, Balcones Resources has since expanded their operations to six locations (and counting) across the country, making them the largest independent recycler in the United States. During SPC Impact 2023, attendees heard from Joaquin Mariel, Chief Commercial Officer of Balcones Resources, on the Main Stage in his TED Talk The MRF’s Role in the Circular Economy (Figure 1).  SPC Impact attendees also got a chance to tour their Austin facility during its operations on Day 2 of the conference.

Figure 1: Joaquin Mariel speaking on the Main Stage on Tuesday at SPC Impact 2023

With 30-35 tons of material processed every hour, to say there were a lot of moving parts is an understatement. This amount of material speaks to the scale of consumer recycling, how it has evolved and continues to grow. Beginning at the mountain of intaken material shown in Figure 2, the Balcones Resources tour guides led SPC Impact attendees through each step of the sortation process all the way to the final product: bails upon bails of separated materials (Figure 3).

       

Figure 2: Pile of intaken material being loaded in by trucks          Figure 3: Separated paper bails

Conveyor belts carry the intaken volume through various types of machinery and isolate it by material type (glass, paper, metal, and plastic). For example, the Eddy Current Separator (Figure 4) uses magnets to sort out metals, and the Fiber and Plastic Optical Sorters (Figure 5) separate materials based on color and/or packaging type using air pressure.

          
Figure 4: Eddy Current Separator                                                                Figure 5: Optical Sorter

Meanwhile, Balcones Resources workers oversee the flow of materials and pull out items by hand that might have been missed by the (mostly) automated machines. Toward the end of the tour, attendees got a glimpse into “last chance” area (Figure 6), which sends materials through a Plastic Optical Sorter to recover any last stragglers it may have missed previously. Unfortunately, this is where you see many of the materials that simply can’t be recycled at the facility (i.e. soft or small bits of plastic, bowling balls, etc.) putting into perspective the need to optimize how we design packaging.

Figure 6: “Last Chance Area”

Common contaminants, such as plastic bags (the largest source of contamination at Balcones Resources in Austin, TX) and electronic waste (which can cause explosions and fires), are where collaboration and coordinated innovation come in. When packaging materials can’t be sorted production slows and costs (in the form of tax dollars) rise for MRFs (Municipal Recycling Facilities). Much of the materials that cannot be sorted are due to the inability to access recycling in underserved communities, and organizations launching new products without informing recyclers. Mariel referenced this frustration on the Main Stage at SPC Impact, calling out companies for launching one-off solutions. Despite good intentions, these innovative solutions cannot be implemented successfully and at scale without comprehensive communication between the companies that create them and the MRFs that process them.

MRFs are often required to maintain and upgrade their machinery to most effectively sort their volume. Similarly, we as members of the packaging community must design and label our materials to match the capabilities of MRFs, as well as the end market needs of their customers. Packaging producers and recyclers need a better understanding of how each other operates to create a mutually beneficial relationship that subsequently betters the planet too.

It is vital to understand that while many materials can be recovered, it does not mean they necessarily will be recovered. The sustainable packaging industry has the power to both provide MRFs with the volume they need to flourish and design the materials that make up that volume to be truly circular. In order for this to happen, all stakeholders need to join forces. SPC Impact, and this tour in particular, brought together a diverse group of key players in the industry, in an environment that thrives on both collaboration and innovative thought.

Figure 7: Balcones Resources Tour Group #2 at SPC Impact 2023
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The next frontier in California organics recycling: edible food recovery https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/05/08/the-next-frontier-in-california-organics-recycling-edible-food-recovery/ Mon, 08 May 2023 17:09:27 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=658

Even Bay Area cities with organics programs are new to working with food donation organizations. Now, local governments are learning skills to help meet a 20% edible waste reduction goal by 2030.

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Much ado about Earth Day https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/04/21/much-ado-about-earth-day/ Fri, 21 Apr 2023 19:07:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=735

Jon Smieja, PhD | VP of Circularity at GreenBiz Group.

For many of us working in sustainability, Earth Day can be frustrating. First off, Earth Day is every day for us. I know that’s cliché, but that’s the reality of our jobs when you consider all the threats our world is facing and the weight of all the interrelated systems that are crumbling around us. Like many other sustainability initiatives, a day for the Earth can seem like far too little, far too late.

In addition to the reasonable level of dread and despair we live with, we often spend precious time and resources in the lead up to Earth Day planning events for our companies, often only to see low participation rates. There are park clean ups, tree sapling giveaways and green team tables. All these activities often “speak to the choir” and don’t bring in too many new faces. In other words, it can be a struggle to engage a broader audience.

Not the inspiring message you usually read on Earth Day? Keep reading, there are brighter messages ahead.

This Earth Day I challenge all of us to address the day with authenticity, no matter where we work or what role we have. Let’s start by acknowledging all the existential risks we face from climate change to biodiversity loss, oceans full of plastic waste to oceans full of melted ice, and everything in between. Once we acknowledge it, let’s be realistic about the hard work it is going to take to fix the mess our species has created. I, for one, view Earth Day through a realist’s lens. Yes, it is a time to celebrate all the great work we do, but maybe more importantly, it is a time for us to reflect on all the hard work yet to be done.

To end on a high note, we asked some of our favorite sustainability trailblazers to share their own thoughts on what this holiday means to them. Enjoy reading their thoughts, and happy Earth Day!

 

“I am grateful that Earth Day gives us all an opportunity to pause and consider our place in the future of our world. As climate change accelerates it is more important than ever to elevate Earth Day as a way to for action and accountability. GreenBlue welcomes any opportunity to highlight the threat of climate change and Earth Day has become a perfect time to check in with members on goals and progress.”

– Paul Nowak, Executive Director @GreenBlue

 

“Earth Day is a chance to not only reflect on our progress but to catalyze solutioneers with a renewed focus powered by ambitious goals. It’s a chance to declare that we are stronger as a community by sharing our resources. We find out that we are not alone on this journey. The activities around this day are meant to inspire, encourage, and equip us for the challenges ahead. ”

– Priscilla Johnson, Chief Innovation Officer @Upstream Solutions

 

We don’t love our moms only on Mother’s Day, and the same with Mother Earth on Earth Day, but it’s similarly a reminder of a life-giving force we often take for granted. That’s the point of stopping to celebrate our planet, with all its wondrous beauty and grave threats, a reminder that what gives us life and sustains us is worth both celebrating and protecting at all costs.”

– Joel Makower, Chairman and Co-Founder @GreenBiz Group

 

“I look at Earth Day as a time to celebrate all the beauty and splendor of the world we live in today, and it is also a time to think about how our actions impact the planet. As a corporate citizen, we feel it is our responsibility to ensure we have sustainable operations that minimize the impact on the surrounding communities and the planet, at large, through efforts to reduce GHG emissions and water usage, minimizing waste from our facilities, designing packaging that is more sustainable, educating our employees, and being engaged with our local communities. Personally, I believe it will take all of us making individual decisions and commitments to doing the right thing for the environment, not just on Earth Day but every day, to sustain our beautiful planet.”

– Elizabeth Rhue, VP of Global Environmental, Sustainability, & Technical Services @Sonoco

 

“Living more sustainably starts with awareness of the problems that exist, and the possible solutions to address them. That’s precisely why Earth Day is so important—it brings the conversation into the mainstream. Luckily, that awareness and inspiration spreads far beyond Earth Day, which is essential to help reinforce sustainable behaviors like remembering to use items designed for reuse or recycling, and to compost food scraps—even the messy and stinky ones.”

– Rhodes Yepsen, Executive Director @BPI

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Degradability additives in Petroleum-based Plastics https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/04/20/degradability-additives-in-petroleum-based-plastics/ Thu, 20 Apr 2023 17:59:25 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=714

Updated February 2023

 

The SPC does not support the use of any kind of degradability additives in packaging, including additives that seek to make packaging more degradable (i.e. break down more rapidly) in landfills, marine environments, or open environments (e.g. as litter). This includes “biodegradable”, “degradable”, “oxo-degradable”, and all other types of degradability additives used in petroleum-based plastics. (For brevity, the term “additive” is used as shorthand for “degradability additives” throughout this document).
The SPC disagrees with the premise that degradability additives contribute any enhancement to the sustainability of petroleum-based plastics. Rather, these additives do not offer any sustainability advantages and they may actually result in more environmental harm. Barring significant advancements, the SPC’s position is firmly against the use of any degradability additives in any petroleum-based plastic. The SPC’s rationale is outlined below.

 

(1) Additives Have a Negative Impact on Recyclability

Plastics have two inherent attributes that make them ideal for recovery: their high embodied energy content qualifies their value for controlled energy recovery, and their exceptional durability renders them ideal for recycling. Additives that are fundamentally designed to compromise the structural integrity of a recyclable material are counterproductive to efforts to recycle more materials and to extract as much future value as possible from existing materials.

 

(2) Additives Contribute to Microplastics on Land and in Water

Most additives are designed to break plastics down into smaller pieces in order to make it sufficiently available to the microorganisms that perform biodegradation. These fragmented pieces may be invisible to the naked eye, yet their effects as microplastics have been shown to be seriously detrimental.

Terrestrial litter is likely to migrate, either by human or natural means, into a marine environment. Additives that are designed to enable biodegradation in terrestrial (on-land) conditions are not tested or designed to be effective in marine conditions. This is because marine conditions have a wider variability in temperature, microbial and nutrient availability, and
exposure to sunlight. In a marine environment, any fragmentation of petroleum-based plastic will exacerbate its harmfulness as pollution. Whether or not biodegradation successfully occurs in these various environments and conditions, petroleum-based plastics should not be designed to encourage fragmentation.

 

(3) Additives are not an Enabler for Compostability

Compostability describes a material’s ability to successfully undergo biological decomposition and transformation into a stabilized organic matter within a specified period of time. To beneficially complete the natural biological cycle, biodegradation should occur in a managed and controlled environment, such as an industrial composting operation. The material must also break down in a way that is non-toxic and harmless to human health and the environment.

Petroleum-based plastics made with biodegradability additives do not break down in such a manner. To date, these additives have not enabled non-compostable plastics to become compostable.

 

(4) Degradation Releases Greenhouse Gas Emissions

As organic materials degrade, their carbon content is transformed to one or more greenhouse gasses — either carbon dioxide if the degradation occurs in the presence of abundant oxygen, or methane if the degradation occurs in an oxygen-deficient environment such as a landfill.

When bio-based materials (such as fiber-based packaging) biodegrade in an oxygen-rich environment, like a composting facility, they complete a naturally-occurring, net-carbon-neutral carbon cycle. This is because the material’s carbon content was recently sequestered from atmospheric carbon dioxide. As material transforms its carbon content into carbon dioxide emissions, the environment shows no net loss or gain of carbon dioxide over the short lifecycle of the material.

Petroleum-based plastics, however, are not bio-based, and the addition of additives does not change that characteristic. If a petroleum-based plastic degrades in an oxygen-rich environment, such as when it becomes litter, it results in the release of previously dormant carbon. These emissions would not occur if the material remained intact and was instead reused or recycled.

In a landfill, petroleum-based plastics with degradability additives also generate methane, a more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide. Even landfills that capture methane are harmful, because gas capture systems typically operate with limited efficiency.

Petroleum-based plastics that are not designed to biodegrade in landfills will remain mostly inert, storing their carbon and preventing it from reentering the atmosphere indefinitely. For this reason, encouraging an otherwise inert material to degrade in a landfill should be avoided.

 

(5) Biodegradability Marketing Claims are Increasingly Unlawful

It is illegal in California, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington to use the term “biodegradable” in marketing claims related to plastic products and/or bags. In some instances, states and jurisdictions specifically restrict the use of marine degradable claims, as well as “oxo-degradable”, “decomposable”, and “degradable”. The Federal Trade Commission’s “Green Guides” also offer guidance on how marketers should avoid using these terms in ways that lead to consumer deception, and explicitly state that “Unqualified degradable claims for items that are customarily disposed in landfills, incinerators, and recycling facilities are deceptive because these locations do not present condition in which complete decomposition will occur within one year.”

Furthermore, marketing any non-compostable material to consumers as being beneficial due to its biodegradability may be misleading and detrimental to efforts intended to advance compostable packaging.

 

(6) Products with Additives Can Contribute to Littering and Consumer Confusion

An additive that is intended to make packaging “litter-friendly” and is marketed to consumers as biodegradable is a severe step in the wrong direction. Work conducted in 2009 by Keep America Beautiful found that consumers are more likely to litter when the item is marked as being “biodegradable”, although more recent data on the exact impacts on consumer behavior remains limited. A 2020 European Commission report references several studies showing a perception amongst consumers that “biodegradable” is an “inherently virtuous aspect of a product and that littering such an item would be less impactful.”

More broadly, studies have shown that consumers do not have a clear understanding of what the term “biodegradable” means. For example, a 2020 study of UK consumers found that 30-41% of consumers believed the term meant a product was home compostable, industrially compostable, would cause no harm to the marine environment, or would cause less harm if it was littered.

These behavioral trends indicate additives are counterproductive to the concerted efforts of industry and NGOs to change littering behavior and promote correct composting behaviors and responsible disposal.

 


 

Summary

While the material composition or performance qualities of biodegradability additives may change over time, their underlying impacts tend to remain the same — they break down a package into smaller fragments while confusing consumers. They have been found to be detrimental to recycling efforts, composting efforts, and open and marine environments.

For the reasons stated above, the SPC maintains its position firmly against the use of any additive in any petroleum-based plastic.

Additional Industry Position Statements

The SPC supports the position statements of the following organizations:

 


 

For more on biodegradability, please see the SPC’s Position on Biodegradable Packaging.

To learn more, contact spcinfo@greenblue.org.

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How Can the Chemical Recycling Industry Optimize its Role in the Circular Economy for Plastics? https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/04/06/how-can-the-chemical-recycling-industry-optimize-its-role-in-the-circular-economy-for-plastics/ Thu, 06 Apr 2023 19:06:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=734

Chemical recycling – the technologies as well as the terminology – is controversial.

Seeking answers, I immersed myself in chemical recycling conversations with leaders in the space by attending the AMI Chemical Recycling Conference last month. At over 200 attendees, this third iteration of the conference was the largest it had been so far, which speaks to the growing interest in the topic of chemical recycling. In addition to attendees representing chemical companies or chemical recycling companies, other attendees less familiar with chemical recycling came to the conference to learn.

Presentation topics spanned policy, feedstock sourcing and sorting, certification, life cycle impacts, and collaboration. It was especially informative to hear about all the activity in bridging technologies that decontaminate or “upgrade” pyrolysis oil to be suitable for refining or steam cracking steps. Throughout the conference, there was quite a bit of discussion on whether material from chemical recycling will “count” as recycled material and what kinds of claims can be made when using mass balance accounting. Other topics that circulated included chemical recycling project finance, the logistics of scaling up from lab/pilot scale to commercial scale, and microwave-based technologies.

A highlight of AMI’s conference was hearing from Dr. Fernando Gómez, Head of Energy, Materials, and Infrastructure Industry Communities at the World Economic Forum, on a panel that discussed driving circularity. Gómez asked attendees to consider, “What is the best combination of our available capabilities?” He challenged us to imagine what the manufacturing and recycling industries would look like if we could design them from scratch and urged us to shift our mindset from value chains to “value cycles.”

“What is the best combination of our available capabilities?”

On the last day of the conference, I presented a talk entitled “Stakeholder Perspectives on the Role of Chemical Recycling in the Circular Economy” based on the work of SPC’s Chemical Recycling Collaborative. Since its launch in late 2021, the Chemical Recycling Collaborative has been tackling a long list of questions submitted by participants in response to the prompt, “What questions about chemical recycling do you find hardest to answer?” I invited conference attendees to reflect on when they were first introduced to the concept of chemical recycling and what questions they find hardest to answer about it, then shared a distilled version of the many questions, concerns, and opinions on chemical recycling I have heard from SPC members and other stakeholders as leader of the SPC Chemical Recycling Collaborative.

At the end of 2022, Collaborative participants expressed that they feel more informed about the types of chemical recycling technologies and how the technologies work, but they are much less certain about the answers to questions on impacts, tracking materials through chemical recycling processes, environmental justice concerns, material aggregation, and economic viability of the technologies. Many of these areas of uncertainty are still evolving or suffer from a lack of clear, credible information. For instance, there are significant disparities in how the environmental impacts of chemical recycling technologies are characterized, depending on the source of the information. Binary answers are often tempting, but the “hardest to answer” questions from SPC Chemical Recycling Collaborative participants are hard precisely because they require nuance and context, and non-binary thinking.

“What future are we aiming for? And how do we get there together?”

I encouraged conference attendees to take questions and criticisms that arise about chemical recycling as helping to identify areas of improvement. I hear significant interest from SPC members in chemical recycling and how these technologies might help them meet their sustainability goals. At the same time, the plastic industry, the chemical industry, and by extension, the chemical recycling industry, are sometimes viewed as a hindrance to sustainability rather than part of the solution.

My advice to the chemical recycling industry was threefold. For chemical recycling to scale sustainably and to reach its full potential in the circular economy, the industry needs to:

  1. use green chemistry,
  2. be transparent, and
  3. match technologies with the right applications.

I asked attendees, “What future are we aiming for? And how do we get there together?” Chemical recycling can serve as a tool to help create circular and sustainable systems for plastics, but the industry has work to do to get there.

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“Biodegradable” Packaging https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/03/08/biodegradable-packaging/ Wed, 08 Mar 2023 18:01:35 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=718

The SPC recommends that packaging companies do not use the term “biodegradable” to market their products to suppliers, retailers, or consumers. The SPC further recommends that companies do not design packaging to be broadly biodegradable, unless a specific application such as soil biodegradability has been tested and makes sense for the specific application, e.g. in the case of agricultural films. The SPC’s rationale is outlined below.

 

1. “Biodegradable” is a confusing and imprecise term.

    • “Biodegradable” refers to materials that have the ability to break down by biological means into the raw materials of nature. On its own, the term does not indicate a specific time frame or environment for when a product will break down. Learn more here.
    • “Compostable” refers to materials that meet third-party standards and yield carbon dioxide, water, inorganic compounds, and biomass at a rate consistent with the biodegradation of natural food materials, while leaving no distinguishable remnants or unacceptable levels of toxic residues.
    • “Bio-based” refers to products that are derived from raw materials such as plants and other renewable agricultural, marine, and forestry materials. It explains the origins of a product (i.e. how it was sourced), not what will happen to it at its end-of-life.

Companies should use the most specific term that applies to their packaging; e.g. if the packaging has been certified compostable, use the term “compostable” rather than “biodegradable”.

 

2. Biodegradability marketing claims are increasingly unlawful.

It is illegal in California, Maryland, Minnesota, and Washington to use the term “biodegradable” in marketing claims related to plastic products and/or bags. The Federal Trade Commission’s “Green Guides” also offer guidance on how marketers should avoid using these terms in ways that lead to consumer deception, and explicitly state that “Unqualified degradable claims for items that are customarily disposed in landfills, incinerators, and recycling facilities are deceptive because these locations do not present condition in which complete decomposition will occur within one year.”

 

3. Biodegradable packaging does not align with third-party certification programs.

Third-party certification programs for compostable packaging, such as BPI, stress the importance of designing packaging to ASTM standards for compostability and verifying degradation with third-party testing. BPI has issued labeling guidelines for companies that emphasize the importance of clear, specific labeling on packaging. GreenBlue’s How2Compost program requires that a package first be BPI certified before it can receive the How2Compost label.
Learn more: SPC’s Guide to Understanding the Role of Compostable Packaging

 

4. Biodegradable packaging can contribute to littering and consumer confusion.

Consumer research indicates that the term “biodegradable” is not well understood by consumers, and can result in consumers discarding packaging on the ground (littering). It is unclear what will happen to the packaging when it is thus discarded in the open environment because of the immense range of climatic conditions; as a result, this behavior should be discouraged.

 


 

For more on biodegradability additives, please see the SPC’s Position on Degradability Additives.
To learn more, contact spcinfo@greenblue.org.

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“Biorecycling” is Chemical Recycling, and Biorecyclable Packaging Already Exists https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/03/01/biorecycling-is-chemical-recycling-and-biorecyclable-packaging-already-exists/ Wed, 01 Mar 2023 19:05:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=733

In the conversation around what technologies can be considered recycling, yet another term has entered the mix: biorecycling. What is biorecycling? A quick google search may tell you that biorecycling involves adding particles from waste plastic to tattoo ink so that those particles can be broken down by the human body – an original concept for sure, but since no new product comes out of this process, it’s a stretch to call it recycling.

The more commonly accepted usage of the word biorecycling is as a synonym for enzymatic degradation. Enzymatic degradation is a kind of depolymerization process, which falls under the larger umbrella of chemical or molecular recycling.

So what is depolymerization? Firstly, polymerization is linking molecular units called monomers together to form long chains. Depolymerization sounds like the exact opposite of polymerization, and it often is, but not always. Depolymerization includes processes that break polymer chains back down to the original monomers and also processes that result in shorter molecular fragments that are not the same as the original monomers.

The easiest polymers to depolymerize are those that contain carbon-oxygen or carbon-nitrogen bonds in the polymer backbone, such as polyesters, polyamides, and polyurethanes. The carbon-oxygen or carbon-nitrogen bonds in these polymers are naturally susceptible to reacting with other chemicals they come in contact with. Under the conditions where these materials are used on an everyday basis, however, this type of reaction is extremely slow.

To employ depolymerization as a method of recycling plastics, these bond-breaking reactions have to be sped up dramatically, and speed can be achieved by using heat, using a chemical catalyst like an acid or base, or using a biological catalyst, also known as an enzyme.

Enzymes are known for being extremely selective and efficient. In the field of synthetic biology, scientists aim to harness enzymatic activity to build molecules that would be challenging to make using traditional synthetic chemistry methods, and scientists can employ enzymes in a similar way to deconstruct molecules.

Working with enzymes comes with its own challenges, however. Enzymes have had all of evolutionary history to specialize to their own particular roles in organisms, so adapting enzymes to serve human purposes takes significant time and effort. At least as far back as the 1970s there were reports in the scientific literature of enzymes that could partially degrade or depolymerize synthetic polymers, but these were specialty polymers and the degradation efficiencies were low. Enzymes were identified that could depolymerize certain polyesters, but the downside of enzyme specificity meant that even these enzymes could not depolymerize polyethylene terephthalate (PET) despite the linkage containing the carbon-oxygen bond (the ester) being the same.

In 2016, a discovery made by a group of researchers in Japan generated a frenzy in the press about plastic-eating bacteria and launched a new era of biorecycling. Analyzing the soil near a bottle manufacturing facility, these researchers found a type of bacteria that contained a pair of enzymes that could depolymerize PET. The bacteria were found to be capable of almost completely degrading a PET sample in six weeks, a major milestone but still much too slow for a scalable recycling technology. Since then, researchers have been studying this enzyme pair (called PETase and MHETase)screening other enzymes for PET degradation capabilities, and altering the enzymes for improved speed and stability.

So where does biorecycling or enzymatic depolymerization stand today? Is it the solution to all our plastic problems? In addition to enzymes requiring intensive research efforts to adapt them for the jobs we want them to do, they are also costly and rather delicate compared to traditional chemical reagents. Only one company, Carbios, is currently scaling a biorecycling process, which speaks to the challenges of this approach. And although biorecycling could apply to a range of polymer types, today it is largely focused on PET. Carbios did previously conduct research on enzymatic recycling of polylactic acid (PLA) and has mentioned possible future investigation of enzymes that could break down other polymers. At least one other chemical recycling technology company was founded on the concept of biorecycling but later pivoted to a chemical approach as being more feasible for recycling their target input, waste polyethylene.

Still, we continue to see innovation and investment in biorecycling, and persistence with biorecycling technologies may yet pay off.

A recent analysis of the technical, economic, and environmental performance of plastic recycling technologies laid out the strengths and weaknesses of enzymatic recycling of PET compared to other chemical recycling approaches, mechanical recycling, and virgin production. Current technology for PET biorecycling performs well on technical metrics such as quality of the output and robustness to contamination (from other types of plastics as well as non-plastic contaminants like biomass and metal). However, it performs worse than the alternatives on environmental metrics such as waste generation, toxicity, and water use. Taking these trade-offs into account, the analysis concludes that enzymatic recycling is the most suitable technology available today to recycle heavily contaminated PET when high-quality output is a priority.

We need to continue to improve the capabilities of biorecycling and evaluate how it best fits into a circular system for plastics. The same technical, economic, and environmental analysis points to a number of opportunities for optimizing enzymatic depolymerization of PET specifically, and also calls out actions like switching to renewable energy that would improve environmental performance not just of biorecycling but of recycling technologies across the board.

Biorecycling by itself isn’t the answer to plastic waste – rather, we should consider how it can play a role in bolstering larger systems of plastic sustainability and circularity. There will never be a single solution to plastic waste, but biorecycling is a promising tool to have in our toolbox.

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Can the Latest Paper Packaging Innovations Actually Be Recycled? New Paper Packaging Recyclability Test from Cepi Can Help https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/02/22/can-the-latest-paper-packaging-innovations-actually-be-recycled-new-paper-packaging-recyclability-test-from-cepi-can-help/ Wed, 22 Feb 2023 19:03:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=732

Paper packaging and paper products are currently more likely to be recycled than plastics. This is due to a more established paper recycling infrastructure and a more uniform material stream. However, a facility designed to turn cardboard boxes into new cardboard is not always able to recycle molded fiber bottles, paper-based snack wrappers, or other new and innovative paper packaging formats. As packaging material sustainability and circularity receive increased attention, many companies are evaluating whether paper-based packaging can help them meet their sustainability goals. This is where paper recyclability testing, the topic of a recent webinar hosted by SPC, is key.

Tom Pollock, Director of Strategic Partnerships at GreenBlue, moderated the webinar alongside presenters Maria Georgiadou, Recycling Manager at the Confederation of European Paper Industries (Cepi), and Guy Lacey, Operations Director at DS Smith.

Georgiadou introduced Cepi, a paper industry association representing close to 500 companies and 900 mills across Europe. Several years ago, Cepi recognized the need for a test method for paper recyclability that would enable the industry to quantify improvements in paper recycling and inform consumers of those improvements. The first version of Cepi’s paper recyclability test method was published in 2019, and then in 2022, Cepi released an updated version of their testing methods developed with input from Lacey and other industry experts.

 

What is Cepi’s test method?

Cepi’s method is meant to indicate whether a package can be successfully recycled at a “standard mill,” where the input stream is classic cardboard and paper. The test process starts with a representative sample cut from the package in question.

  • This sample is disintegrated to simulate the repulping process that would happen at a mill, then filtered.
  • The filtrate (the liquid portion) is examined to determine how much material is dissolved and what would be entering the water stream in a recycling process.
  • The retained material from the filtration undergoes coarse screening to remove anything larger than 5 mm.

Certain types of robust paper packaging, such as the multi-ply kraft paper board used in beer carriers, are known to be recyclable in mills but difficult to break down in this lab-scale test process. For this reason, if the “rejects” portion from the coarse screening is mainly composed of fibrous material, it will be subjected to the disintegration step again.

  • After coarse screening, a sheet of paper is formed with the “accepts” portion. Forming a sheet of paper at this stage is not part of the paper recycling process, but for test purposes, this step gives a first impression of any issues with adhesion or visual appearance.
  • The next step is fine screening through 150-micron slots, and again evaluation of the “rejects” and sheet formation with the “accepts.”
  • Macrostickies analysis is the last, but optional, step in the test method.

 

Once results have been obtained from this test method, how is recyclability determined?

There is more to recyclability than reprocessing, so this kind of test method cannot give an absolute yes-or-no answer to the question “Is this package recyclable?” But what a test method can do is identify any red flags that could prevent a package from being reprocessed successfully.

Cepi’s test method looks at factors like sheet adhesion and fiber pullout, as well as the visual quality of the test sheets. Visual quality is ranked using a decision tree, where factors like wax stains or many metalized particles would indicate potential problems if the package were to enter a recycling facility.

“Innovation in packaging design is moving more quickly than recycling technologies”

Test method results can help guide packaging designers to choose materials and formats that have a high likelihood of being compatible with current recycling infrastructure.

 

How widely applicable is the test method? 

DS Smith’s Lacey described the work that went into minimizing lab-to-lab variation so that consistent results would be obtained from the method regardless of where it’s performed.

Considering the policy outlook in Europe, a consistent method to assess recyclability will be even more important in the coming years. More specific requirements on packaging recyclability are likely on the horizon as part of the European Green Deal and Circular Economy Action Plan, and packaging recyclability performance is also likely to be tied to eco-modulated fees in extended producer responsibility (EPR) schemes.

Cepi’s test method was developed with harmonization in mind, and it is an excellent tool to drive paper-based packaging recyclability in and beyond Europe. Currently, however, paper recyclability test methods in North America differ from those in Europe, sometimes resulting in different pass/fail results for the same package. Further coordination is still needed among test methods to ensure that you get the same answer to “Is this package recyclable?” regardless of where the question is asked and which test is used. Widespread use of existing test methods and increased harmonization as the test methods continue to evolve will help provide clarity upfront on whether an innovative paper package can truly be recycled.

To learn more about the landscape of paper packaging recyclability test methods in Europe and North America, check out SPC’s report, “How to Know If Your Paper Packaging is Recyclable: Introduction To Paper Packaging Recyclability Test Methods & Specifications.”

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Food Waste In America: One Big Issue, Many Possible Solutions https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/02/07/food-waste-in-america-one-big-issue-many-possible-solutions/ Tue, 07 Feb 2023 17:19:39 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=664

35% of all food goes unsold or uneaten in the United States. If this fact doesn’t shock you, it’s probably because you’ve heard it before. America’s food waste problem is common knowledge among stakeholders in the food and beverage industry. So are the environmental, social, and economic issues linked with this gargantuan inefficiency.

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It Will Take a Village to Recycle All Plastics https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/01/18/it-will-take-a-village-to-recycle-all-plastics/ Wed, 18 Jan 2023 19:02:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=730

When the topic of chemical recycling comes up at SPC events, it’s no surprise that the conversation typically focuses on how these technologies apply to plastic packaging. Part of the promise of chemical recycling, though, is the ability to recycle polymers in numerous forms such as in carpets, mattresses, durable plastics, and other items not well-suited for mechanical recycling. In the “Chemical Recycling Beyond Packaging,” session at SPC Advance 2022, Jodie Morgan, CEO of Nexus Circular, Holli Alexander, Strategic Initiatives Manager for Global Sustainability at Eastman, and Thomas Philipon, CEO of TotalEnergies Corbion, came together on stage to talk about the benefits of cross-sector collaboration in chemical recycling.

First… what is “chemical recycling”?

The session began by level-setting around the term “chemical recycling.” While each industry professional in the space likely has their own preferred term, we used the terms chemical recycling, advanced recycling, molecular recycling, and non-mechanical recycling interchangeably for this session. Importantly, when using any of these terms that include the word “recycling,” we are referring to processes where the outputs feed back into materials like plastics and not processes where the outputs are used as fuels.

Among chemical recycling technologies, there are three main categories: purification, depolymerization, and conversion. This session focused on depolymerization and conversion technologies, which are more likely to be used for moving material among different applications compared to purification technologies. Since purification technologies use physical processes that do not change the underlying polymer structure, the output material must be used in applications where the properties or specifications match those of the input material. In contrast, material from depolymerization and conversion can be used to construct new polymers with properties different from the inputs. Depolymerization technologies that produce monomers provide an opportunity to construct new polymers with different chain lengths (determining properties such as intrinsic viscosity and melt flow) and/or different combinations of monomers. The outputs from conversion are even more versatile in terms of what applications they can be used for, as the basic chemicals produced by these technologies can feed back into chemical manufacturing processes in a similar way to petrochemical feedstocks.

Polymers and processes

With the stage set, each panelist introduced their company’s chemical recycling process(es), shared what polymers their processes handle, and listed some applications aside from packaging that also use these polymers.

First, Morgan explained that Nexus Circular operates a commercial-scale pyrolysis facility in the Atlanta area that produces what they call “circular liquid.” The process takes polyethylene (PE), polypropylene (PP), and polystyrene (PS) feedstocks. Morgan named the automotive industry as another large user of these materials in addition to packaging.

Next, Alexander spoke about Eastman’s work in both the depolymerization and conversion spaces. Eastman currently operates a facility in Tennessee where polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is depolymerized via a glycolysis process and has recently built a facility to depolymerize PET via methanolysis. The monomers from these “polyester renewal” technologies are used to make new types of polyesters that can go into products such as reusable water bottles. Eastman’s “carbon renewal technology” is a gasification process that takes mixed plastics among other feedstocks to produce basic chemicals that are then used to make cellulosic plastics. These cellulosic plastics have been used in items such as eyeglass frames and textiles.

Last, Philipon shared that TotalEnergies Corbion (a 50/50 venture between TotalEnergies and Corbion) uses a hydrolysis process to depolymerize polylactic acid (PLA). TotalEnergies Corbion operates a facility in Thailand where lactide monomer is made into new PLA. Although PLA is produced and used on a smaller scale compared to other plastics in packaging, it has multiple other applications. Philipon mentioned 3D printing as another industry where PLA plays a role.

Ecosystem of plastics recycling

Although many challenges remain for plastic packaging to be collected, sorted and ultimately recycled, it’s miles ahead of other plastic products in that at least some plastic packaging fits into established curbside collection models. Still, taking lessons from other sectors is key to finding solutions for hard-to-recycle plastic packaging. Philipon described material recovery as an ecosystem—where many players have important roles, and players are highly interconnected and dependent on each other. Rather than pin the journey to plastic circularity on any one company, we have to collaborate and find ways to bolster the entire system. Alexander brought up the many items that are currently listed as “not accepted” in curbside recycling guidance and asked which of these items might be accepted curbside in the future. She acknowledged that we won’t be recycling everything overnight but encouraged aiming for acceptance of more items in curbside collection rather than fewer. Collaboration in this materials ecosystem also includes collaboration between chemical and mechanical recyclers to match materials with the right process. Morgan mentioned that items such as plastic containers for motor oil or paint are contaminants in mechanical recycling processes but can enter a pyrolysis process with no problem.

So how do we enable this collaborative, resilient plastic recycling ecosystem? Morgan shared that although chemical recyclers can take different materials or formats than mechanical recyclers, design for recycling is still critical. Chemical recycling is not a catch-all, but rather each company has its own specifications for the material streams it accepts. For instance, components other than PE and PP in multilayer packaging can cause issues for Nexus Circular’s process and need to be limited. Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) was called out as undesirable for all the technologies represented. Philipon identified mass balance accounting as a key enabler for building up the plastics recycling ecosystem. He emphasized that it’s imperative for recycled material accounting practices to be credible. Policy also came up in the discussion. Alexander told us that Eastman recycles carpet collected through California’s extended producer responsibility (EPR) scheme for carpets. Currently, this carpet is being sent to Tennessee for recycling, and Alexander highlighted the need for expanding the network of recycling options and localizing recycling efforts through more widespread EPR.

Outlook

The conversation closed by talking about what the future holds and what role we can expect chemical recycling to play. Morgan pointed out that the scale of plastic waste generation is outpacing the capacity and capabilities of mechanical recycling. Mechanical recycling can be expected to accommodate some of this growth, but we are going to need multiple approaches. In terms of the timeline for chemical recycling technologies to scale, Morgan estimated it will take 10-20 years for chemical recycling to be available at a level that begins to match the scale of plastic waste. Alexander brought up supply chain problems that have made scaling even more challenging. She stated that Eastman’s methanolysis plant took three years to build for this reason.

The panelists all shared the sentiment that further education around and understanding chemical recycling technologies are important for these solutions to be dispatched most effectively. Alexander added that we don’t know what emerging recycling technologies will be capable of in the future. She encouraged thinking about the spectrum of chemical recycling technologies based on principles—especially for policymaking, prioritizing reduction, then reuse, then recycling will be a better guide than attempting to make binary judgments on specific technologies. Philipon expressed that so much is still unknown but that we can start from what we know, and going forward we will have to learn by doing, by trialing and iterating ideas, to make chemical recycling and the entire recycling ecosystem work better.

The overarching theme in this session was that this is a space where no company (or even sector) can be successful by striking out alone. In such an interdependent economy, getting out of step with the rest of the system likely means being stranded without reliable feedstocks or reliable markets. Collaboration is absolutely crucial. Collection, sortation, and recycling innovations and infrastructure need to grow together, in sync, for the circular plastics ecosystem to thrive.

 

Want to know more about developments in the landscape of chemical recycling technologies? SPC members can continue learning about chemical recycling by viewing past resources or joining future meetings of the SPC Chemical Recycling Collaborative.

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ICYMI: “Beyond PFAS-free Packaging” Webinar Recap https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/12/26/icymi-beyond-pfas-free-packaging-webinar-recap/ Mon, 26 Dec 2022 19:00:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=729

Our own Director of the Sustainable Packaging Coalition (SPC), Karen Hagerman, and folks from ChemFORWARD recently shared the initial results from the Safe + Circular Materials Collaborative via a webinar format. This year-long supply chain collaboration explored the challenges of circular packaging and solutions to accelerate the transition to safer alternatives. Read the full article and watch the free recording here.

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Collaborating to create the future of flexible packaging at SPC Advance 2022 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/11/17/collaborating-to-create-the-future-of-flexible-packaging-at-spc-advance-2022/ Thu, 17 Nov 2022 18:58:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=628

On the second day of SPC Advance in Atlanta, the Sustainable Packaging Coalition’s Flexible Packaging Recovery Collaborative convened to workshop the future of flexible packaging recovery. Led by Ruth Maust, a Project Manager of GreenBlue, the collaborative broke from its usual format of a seminar and discussion about opportunities and resources in the flexible packaging recovery space to meet in person. 

Alison Keane, President, and CEO of the Flexible Packaging Association, opened the session by discussing the challenges their members are facing. Currently, both suppliers and converters are reporting talent and labor shortages, raw material procurement challenges, and sustainability initiatives as the primary areas of focus. As the packaging industry continues to move from sustainability goals of source reduction to goals that include circularity, creating end markets and improving recyclability are increasing in priority. Current trends indicate two popular sustainability initiatives in this space: “recycle ready” mono-material polyethylene designed for the store drop-off stream and incorporating post-consumer recycled content. 

Kristina Hansen, President of Plastics Forming Enterprises, focused her portion of the opening presentation on the importance of testing. Specifically, Plastics Forming Enterprises has programs to pilot recycling processes and provide certified testing for various recyclability standards. The goal of this work is to support the package design process to improve recyclability while it is still early enough in the production process to make adjustments to the design. 

The second half of the session was devoted to discussion between workshop participants. Topics included: What is the number one thing you want to see for flexible packaging circulatory in the future?  What do you see as the biggest barrier to getting there? What project of initiative in this space are you most excited about or think has the most potential impact? Where do you see the biggest gap or opportunities that no one seems to be working on? 

Overall, the themes of discussion centered around infrastructure investment for collection and sortation, work to incentivize the integration of post-consumer recycled content (potentially into non-food grade film applications) and working towards the goal of widespread curbside collection of films in the United States. The group identified significant barriers, including a lack of standardization in access to recycling and in what degree of product residue renders a package unrecyclable.  

As is becoming more common, policy and chemical recycling were both brought up as potential paths to reaching these goals. Other initiatives to watch include: the efforts to increase flexible medical packaging by the Healthcare Packaging Recycling Council and regionalized circular film economy efforts in Minnesota

Questions posed by participants to ponder in future meetings include: Is there a path to recyclability for mono-material polypropylene film? How can films be sorted in a MRF without causing issues? Do consumers have an appetite for education or would simple, clear, instructions be better received? How can we balance the need for progress with desire for perfection without allowing the perfect to become the enemy of the good?

To join in on these conversations, click here for more information on getting involved with the Flexible Packaging Recovery collaborative!

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GreenBlue/SPC California Regional Film & Bag Study Results https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/11/15/greenblue-spc-california-regional-film-bag-study-results/ Tue, 15 Nov 2022 23:20:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=626

Contributors:

Lucy Pierce, Project Manager, SPC

Nina Goodrich, Consultant, GreenBlue

Laura Thompson, Director, Recycled Material Standards (RMS)

How2Recycle is a standardized labeling system in the United States and Canada that clearly communicates recycling instructions to the public. The How2Recycle Store Drop-off label is contingent upon the extensive retail take-back infrastructure to comply with Federal Trade Commission (FTC) access guidance. Store drop off programs collect front of house consumer films and wraps and combine them with the films and wraps generated from store operations. Leveraging retail back haul efficiencies, these materials are transported to aggregation sites, typically distribution centers, where they are baled and sold to recyclers. 

Phase 1 of a national research project to update bag and film recycling access is currently underway with Stina Inc. In the Spring of 2022 GreenBlue enlisted Resource Recycling Systems (RRS) to develop a California specific study  as a way to determine the bag and film recycling landscape in California. The study was originally intended for internal review. However, given the  recent concerns about bag and film recycling  in California, we’ve released the study to help provide robust data for the public. You can read our condensed 2-page document summarizing the results of the study here.

It is important to note differences between the BagandFilmRecycling.org directory and this study. Stina manages the film drop-off directory and adds and removes stores from the directory on an ongoing basis based on input from chains, consumers, and other local sources. During Covid, a number of stores from BagandFilmRecycling.org were removed based on changing store drop off policies and public health concerns. The SPC is beginning work with Stina and RRS to confirm bin placement and add back retail locations contacted in this access study. This study represents the results of conversations with the major retailers listed in the study and store spot checks. The list of stores accepting bags and films from consumers is always dynamic based on a variety of factors and post-Covid has shifted significantly. There is a density of retail drop off locations, especially in highly populated areas and many of the stores listed have locations near each other. This creates redundancy and additional confidence in the access maps.

 

Study Objectives

  • Document consumer access to recycling for LDPE film and flexible packaging within the state of California.
  • Determine quantity and quality of LDPE films and flexible packaging collected and reclaimed within the state of California.

 

The study looked at two pathways for bag and film recycling: MRF collection and retail Store Drop-off. The study confirmed that LDPE film and flexible packaging is  managed outside the curbside system in California. Material that is collected through the MRF infrastructure is badly contaminated and usually sent to landfill.

The bulk of the data in the report relates to retail Store Drop-off and consumer access. 

RRS identified stores that accept films and bags and compared the store locations to California’s population density.

Consumer Access was analyzed using three different measures: 

  • Radial Distance
  • Driving Distance
  • Driving Time

RESULTS

Radial Distance 

Heat map shows radial distance to the nearest PE bag and film retail drop off location. Access to retail store drop off using straight population of less than 3 miles is 87.6%

Driving distance

Heat map shows driving distance to the nearest PE film and bag retail drop off location. Access to retail store drop off using straight population is 78.1%

Driving Time

Heat map shows driving time to the nearest PE film and bag retail drop off location. 92.9% of California consumers have access to retail store drop off within a 15 minute drive (≤15 minutes from home).

PART 2 RESULTS

Characterization and Quantity Estimates

In all instances, retail drop off films and bags are combined with the films from back of house operations and hauled using reverse logistics to retailer distribution centers (DCs) where they can be baled and/or prepared for market. Thus, most volumes are reported from the DC level, not the store level. Furthermore, to understand post consumer film collection levels, individual store-level audits would need to be performed. 

In the table to the right, estimated volumes use both retailer specific data and modeled per store generated data when specific values were not shared by retailers.

 

 

SUMMARY

  • Total estimated volume of PE films and bags collected in California  for recycling is 17.45 MM lbs per year. RRS estimates that 14.8 and 15.7 MM lbs are reclaimed. 
  • The end market for this material has a high yield and it is estimated that 85-90% of the collected material ends up in the final product or packaging.
  •  The principal end market for store drop off films is composite decking materials. 
  • There has been substantial growth in PE film reclamation capacity in CA, with most reclamation capacity growth focused on Grade A films. 
  • The success of retail store drop off for bags and films is based on consumer convenience (as drop off is a part of grocery shopping routine) and retailers are providing backhaul and aggregation services along with positive economics compared to landfill. 

 

 

If you are interested in learning more you can read the entire California Regional Film and Bag Study here.

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Getting Clear on Compostable Packaging with a Practitioner’s Roadmap https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/11/10/getting-clear-on-compostable-packaging-with-a-practitioners-roadmap/ Thu, 10 Nov 2022 23:15:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=623

As more and more converters and brands explore compostable packaging, industry guidance on how to get started – and create a successful package – is more important than ever. 

An effective compostable package starts with a clear understanding of which product categories are the right fit for compostability. Companies will then need to explore the implications for the R&D process, and consider shelf life, machinability, and transportation testing. Designing for compostability is just the first step – brands and converters also need to understand how to conduct field and lab-testing to validate the compostability of the package, achieve third-party certification, market it appropriately, and educate their customers. 

On Day 2 of SPC Advance 2022, the SPC’s Compostable Packaging Collaborative hosted a “practitioner’s roadmap” workshop, guiding attendees through the steps required to create compostable packaging. A panel of experts outlined important considerations; attendees then put the guidelines into action by working in small groups to assess sample packages. 

Missed the workshop? Follow the steps below for a crash course on compostable packaging. 

Step 1 – Get your bearings and determine fit

Compostability is fundamentally different from something being “biodegradable”, a term that’s now banned in multiple states across the US. Compostability should be pursued for packaging that’s in contact with food or likely to be a contaminant at composting facilities. More on the definitions and applications for compostability can be found on the Collaborative’s resources page. With this criteria in mind, attendees analyzed fit for pet food, bakery items, frozen meal trays, condiment packets, snack bags, and salad kits.


 

Step 2 – Consider your biomaterial options

When it comes to choosing a compostable material, there are now many fiber and bioplastic options available to brands. Dr. Sridevi Narayan-Sarathy shared PepsiCo’s experience with a range of bioplastics, including PHA, PLA, and PBS. For applications with high performance needs such as salty or snack foods, a package will typically need to have multiple layers of these bioplastics, so it pays to understand the options.


 

Step 3 – Determine your “nice to haves” and “must haves”

Megan Robison from the How2Recycle team outlined a hierarchy of needs that packaging companies can apply to their products to better understand how to juggle compostable materials’ impacts to line speeds, package windows, shelf-life, and branding space. Getting clear on which of these specifications is a “nice to have” versus a “must have” is key for unlocking innovation.


 

Step 4 – Get third-party certification

Third-party certification of compostability, such as the one offered by BPI (Biodegradable Products Institute), is critical for building trust with composters, municipalities, and consumers. BPI’s Rhodes Yepsen walked the group through the basic requirements of the certification process and its intersection with field testing. A sharp focus on material health (through no intentionally-added PFAS, for example) will ensure brands are designing products that have a beneficial impact on finished compost.


 

Step 5 – Label and educate; then repeat

It’s a big accomplishment to create a high-performing, third-party certified compostable packaging. But you’re not done yet – brands and converters will need to clearly communicate compostability on product. EcoProducts’ Steve Rosse shared their approach to educating across channels (distributors, retailers, consumers) and using clear, prominent labeling that differentiate compostables from recyclables. Industry guidelines are available to help companies achieve these best practices, which are also increasingly outlined in state labeling legislation.

Attendees left the workshop with a sense of the challenges for designing and labeling effective compostable packaging across a variety of product categories, but also a practical framework for tackling these challenges in their own product development journeys.

Want to learn more? Members from across the value chain are invited to join the SPC’s Compostable Packaging Collaborative.

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What Prompts Investment in PHA: Insights from a Value Chain Collaboration https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/10/28/what-prompts-investment-in-pha-insights-from-a-value-chain-collaboration/ Fri, 28 Oct 2022 23:13:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=622

Reaching the launch date of a new innovation through a collaborative process is exciting, but it takes many internal and external stakeholders working together to achieve that goal. Day 2 of SPC Advance 2022 continued to highlight the role of collaboration with sustainable packaging development with a panel about qualifying innovations into the recycling stream. The key takeaways of the discussion included: 

  1. Collaboration is the only way to have a holistic approach that involves all necessary stakeholders. If you miss a critical stakeholder, you waste your resources. 
  2. Start with understanding the market needs and the definitions of recyclability so that you can target the problems with the research and data that meet the actual needs of your market. 
  3. Working and sharing transparently across the supply chain is important. 
  4. Accelerating knowledge and change can mean choosing not to keep technology proprietary. 
  5. Consensus on what the standards are and being able to quantify what specifications are necessary. We need to be designing for the future; thinking about the world in 2025 and designing packaging for that world (not the present). 

This panel was moderated by Patrick Keenan of General Mills and featured: Linda Roman from Kraft Heinz, Brian Hawkinson of the American Forest & Paper Association, Barak Bright of Clearwater Paper, Martin Grandjean of Tembo paper, and Megan Robison representing the How2Recycle team. The panel featured members at different stages of the value chain and focused primarily on fiber packaging materials. 

One point mentioned early in the discussion was the importance of seeking out material “agnostic” equipment. Standards are evolving and it’s not possible to replace or change out equipment as often as the packaging materials advance. If a possible solution affects the runnability of a design, it is unlikely to be accepted. Thus, investing in material-agnostic equipment that can handle different substrates and materials is an important strategy to building future capacity. 

Likewise, the panel highlighted the importance of collaboration with mills and other reprocessors, especially in the absence of standards. The mills ultimately determine if paper gets recycled, so any efforts to increase circularity through recycling need to incorporate stakeholders from the mills. This is especially crucial as consensus on what standards determine recyclability remains a challenge. More standards for different paper-based formats are needed so that it is clear what the benchmark is. Without specific standards, it is not possible to measure whether or not something is still not recyclable or if it’s been iterated into something that works.

Food residue remains a messy issue in paper recyclability. Recent Westrock research on pizza boxes shows the power of questioning urban legends about recycling. With data from paper mills on acceptance combined with re-processability testing, the study demonstrates that residual grease and cheese are not an issue for reprocessing. Other food residues still need that same level of investment in research to determine whether or not specific product residue is an issue. 

Looking to the future, the panel stressed the importance of working on dual paths for innovation. Without multiple alternatives for innovating recyclability, the timelines of bringing an innovation to market can mean the strategy is obsolete before the innovation is fully introduced, and valuable time was wasted. Dual paths are required so that we can be ready for the future that arrives, rather than relying on a single possible outcome. 

Achieving the goals industry has set around recyclability and incorporation of recycled content will take all members of the value chain working towards increased recycling rates. In order to make packaging go from recyclable to consistently recycled, each member of the value chain must be willing to support others with data sharing, transparency on challenges (and solutions), and pre-competitive collaboration. 

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Overcoming the Challenges of Qualifying Innovations in the Recycling Stream https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/10/28/overcoming-the-challenges-of-qualifying-innovations-in-the-recycling-stream/ Fri, 28 Oct 2022 18:43:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=616

Reaching the launch date of a new innovation through a collaborative process is exciting, but it takes many internal and external stakeholders working together to achieve that goal. Day 2 of SPC Advance 2022 continued to highlight the role of collaboration with sustainable packaging development with a panel about qualifying innovations into the recycling stream. The key takeaways of the discussion included:

  1. Collaboration is the only way to have a holistic approach that involves all necessary stakeholders. If you miss a critical stakeholder, you waste your resources.
  2. Start with understanding the market needs and the definitions of recyclability so that you can target the problems with the research and data that meet the actual needs of your market.
  3. Working and sharing transparently across the supply chain is important.
  4. Accelerating knowledge and change can mean choosing not to keep technology proprietary.
  5. Consensus on what the standards are and being able to quantify what specifications are necessary. We need to be designing for the future; thinking about the world in 2025 and designing packaging for that world (not the present).

This panel was moderated by Patrick Keenan of General Mills and featured: Linda Roman from Kraft Heinz, Brian Hawkinson of the American Forest & Paper Association, Barak Bright of Clearwater Paper, Martin Grandjean of Tembo paper, and Megan Robison representing the How2Recycle team. The panel featured members at different stages of the value chain and focused primarily on fiber packaging materials.

One point mentioned early in the discussion was the importance of seeking out material “agnostic” equipment. Standards are evolving and it’s not possible to replace or change out equipment as often as the packaging materials advance. If a possible solution affects the runnability of a design, it is unlikely to be accepted. Thus, investing in material-agnostic equipment that can handle different substrates and materials is an important strategy to building future capacity.

Likewise, the panel highlighted the importance of collaboration with mills and other reprocessors, especially in the absence of standards. The mills ultimately determine if paper gets recycled, so any efforts to increase circularity through recycling need to incorporate stakeholders from the mills. This is especially crucial as consensus on what standards determine recyclability remains a challenge. More standards for different paper-based formats are needed so that it is clear what the benchmark is. Without specific standards, it is not possible to measure whether or not something is still not recyclable or if it’s been iterated into something that works.

Food residue remains a messy issue in paper recyclability. Recent Westrock research on pizza boxes shows the power of questioning urban legends about recycling. With data from paper mills on acceptance combined with re-processability testing, the study demonstrates that residual grease and cheese are not an issue for reprocessing. Other food residues still need that same level of investment in research to determine whether or not specific product residue is an issue.

Looking to the future, the panel stressed the importance of working on dual paths for innovation. Without multiple alternatives for innovating recyclability, the timelines of bringing an innovation to market can mean the strategy is obsolete before the innovation is fully introduced, and valuable time was wasted. Dual paths are required so that we can be ready for the future that arrives, rather than relying on a single possible outcome.

Achieving the goals industry has set around recyclability and incorporation of recycled content will take all members of the value chain working towards increased recycling rates. In order to make packaging go from recyclable to consistently recycled, each member of the value chain must be willing to support others with data sharing, transparency on challenges (and solutions), and pre-competitive collaboration.

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2022 SPC Innovator Award Winners Announced https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/10/26/2022-spc-innovator-award-winners-announced/ Wed, 26 Oct 2022 20:06:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=617

This annual award celebrates the people and organizations behind the biggest achievements in sustainably innovative packaging.

CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA — For over five years, the SPC Innovator Awards have featured companies’ dedication to continually improve sustainable packaging. The goal of these awards is to highlight novel solutions and inspire other organizations within the space to test and scale sustainable packaging innovations.

The Sustainable Packaging Coalition congratulated the winners of the 2022 SPC Innovator Awards on the first day of SPC Advance during an awards ceremony sponsored by Trayak. Upon taking the stage, the winners spoke to what stood out to them among the innovations this year: collaboration. Forming new partnerships, working with different parts of the supply chain, and investing in new technology all strengthened the winning innovations.

We are thrilled to announce the three 2022 SPC Innovator Award winners in Responsible Sourcing, Design Optimization, and Recovery innovation categories. Read more about what the winning companies are working on below.

Innovation in Responsible Sourcing Winner
Flöter Verpackungs-Service GmbH | AirWave PaperWave

Starting to develop this idea in 2018, Flöter Verpackungs-Service GmbH’s inflatable paper cushion solution actively works to replace plastic e-commerce cushions. The company made it a point to focus on compostability in addition to recyclability, recognizing that composting can be a global end-of-life scenario. Flöter Verpackungs-Service GmbH developed a solution using Forest Stewardship Council (FSC)-certified paper and a potato starch lining, designed to be both curbside recyclable and compostable. Their hope is to end their own plastic-based production and transition to air and paper-based materials in the near future.

The Importance: Because the air cushions are produced directly at the packing station, additional energy expenditure and CO2 emissions are saved during transport. PaperWave can be disposed of in both the organic waste or paper recycling bins. When disposing of it, the consumer is able to easily identify that it is paper, and the product also bears the RESY mark as well as the sorting symbol 22PAP, common symbols in the European market. In addition, the product has been certified by the Paper Technology Foundation in Munich (PTS) as recyclable.

Innovation in Design Optimization Winner
WestRock | KD-Fold™

During their acceptance speech, WestRock spoke to how they brought many parts of the supply chain together and worked closely with FedEx to endlessly trial and test their design for a winning solution. Outperforming a standard plastic mailer, the KD-Fold™ was recognized for its operational efficiencies. It effectively minimizes fiber material with a tight fit that avoids the use of void fill. This design not only improved efficiency but storage space on the shipping pallet as well.

The Importance: The KD-Fold™ uses an average of 50% less paper than a small, corrugated box needed for the same contents. KD-Fold™ is both Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) and FSC certified. It is also curbside recyclable. The Pak On Demand™ mailer system produces custom, sustainable fiber-based mailers on demand and seals the package for shipment. This system has a footprint of only 5 feet by 12 feet, requiring less space in back-of-store operations or space used for e-commerce order fulfillment. Since only one operator is needed for the Pak On Demand™, labor reduction and savings are possible.

Innovation in Recovery Winner
AMP Robotics | How AI and Producer Collaboration are Influencing Recovery and Driving Increased Recycling Rates

AMP Robotics’s winning innovation turned to the potential of Artificial Intelligence (AI) to successfully sort through the messiest of recycling streams. In partnership with Sonoco, a global packaging provider, AMP Robotics created a new material category within its neural network specific to rigid paperboard cans—items like Pringles cans and coffee, nut, and snack containers. The partnership drives increased recycling rates for spiral-wound paper canisters with steel and paper bottoms produced by Sonoco and other manufacturers. In addition to being a manufacturer, Sonoco is a recycler, operating more than 40 recycling facilities globally. The company has deployed an AMP Cortex™ intelligent robotics system in one of its facilities, with a second planned in another; this recycling relationship enables Sonoco to directly test and leverage AMP’s technology.

The Importance: AMP is working with companies across the spectrum of recyclable materials to adapt its AI platform to the specificity of a manufacturer or brand and disperse the sorting capability to materials recovery facilities (MRFs) with its robotic sorting systems. After beginning testing in 2021, their AI is now able to successfully identify and sort 50 billion packaging types and will only improve with more technological advancements. With more and more companies setting PCR commitments, AMP Robotics went through an iterative series of real-world MRF trials to recover more and more materials from the waste stream. Any MRF with an AMP Cortex system can now accurately and efficiently sort Sonoco’s paper can to the desired stream. This enables manufacturers to directly influence what’s recoverable and take advantage of the ability to capture more of their specific packaging.

A big thank you to the multitude of companies who submitted their ideas and current work in the sustainable packaging space. The twelve 2022 finalists can be found in our archive library at the bottom of the page here. This archive dates back to submissions from 2017 if you find yourself curious about just how far the ideas in the past five years have come.

Beginning as the Trashies in 2015, and transitioning to the SPC Innovator Awards in 2017, we are continuing to evolve the SPC Innovator Awards to accelerate sustainable packaging designs and recovery systems. Stay tuned for more information about the next round of the awards on our website.

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Going beyond SMART – Why you might want to set FASTER sustainable packaging goals https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/08/25/going-beyond-smart-why-you-might-want-to-set-faster-sustainable-packaging-goals/ Thu, 25 Aug 2022 18:18:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=614

Common concerns in sustainability goal setting include: Are we aiming high enough? Are we targeting the right problems? Are we successfully communicating our efforts to our customers and stakeholders? In July of 2022, at SPC Engage in Montreal, Olga Kachook, Director of Bioeconomy and Reuse Initiatives at GreenBlue, and Frances Mazur-Batistoni, Senior Consultant, Anthesis Group, introduced a framework for assessing public-facing sustainability goals.

FASTER is built on the FAST goal setting framework proposed by Charles Sull and Donald Sull at the Sloan Business School at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). FAST stands for frequently discussed, ambitious, specific, and transparent. This framework was developed to account for some of the shortcomings of the popular SMART (specific, measurable, attainable, realistic, and timely) goals framework. SMART is a useful tool for developing goals that are designed first and foremost to be achieved. This can be helpful in addressing shortcomings and empowering individuals and teams to perform better but is not necessarily helpful in exceeding expectations in the long run. 

FAST is a framework designed to foster both ambition and achievement. “Frequently discussed” means the goal is embedded into regular communications, not relegated to infrequent check-ins. Frequently discussing a goal keeps it front of mind and more likely to be consistently worked towards.

 “Ambitious” does not mean impossible to reach, but that the goal itself is a stretch from the current state. For something to be ambitious, oftentimes exactly how to achieve the goal at the outset is unknown and must be determined once the target is set. 

“Specific” is one area of overlap between FAST and SMART goals. Specificity is in the targeting of a single performance indicator. We can’t effectively reach goals if we are uncertain about their scope. Being specific in goal setting can mean setting multiple goals for different indicators rather than lumping multiple indicators into one goal.

 The last letter in FAST stands for “transparent” meaning everyone on the team knows what goal they are working towards both individually and as a team. This encourages both accountability and partnership in reaching goals. 

 While it may sound counterintuitive to think that a goal designed to be achieved could be a shortcoming, ambition is lost when too much focus is placed on being realistic. Goal setting research has found that people are more likely to perform higher when given ambitious goals, rather than told to “do their best.” Thus, it could be argued that focusing primarily on setting goals that are most likely to be achievable is actually limiting potential, rather than encouraging it. The benefit of the FAST framework’s “A for Ambitious”  is that it explicitly calls out ambition as a good thing. This is especially useful for sustainability goals because we need to go further, faster, and not plod along with business-as-usual with incremental changes to the status quo.

As shared by Kachook and Mazur-Batistoni at SPC Engage 2022, FASTER builds on the FAST framework by including the components of Easy to Understand and Relevant as considerations for making a goal available to a wider audience. 

Ease of understanding to a broad audience is critical when making goals public. If goals are too “in the weeds”, communication to a broad audience might actually be closer to greenwashing instead of informing them on the progress and values a company is working towards. If a sustainability goal is written in a way that is not easy to understand, a consumer could interpret it outside the intended scope or be unduly swayed by something that sounds like a good idea but might not actually be best practice. Under this framework, goals that are well written do not need to be explained and they should matter to your stakeholders. 

Relevant means the goals should be important to your stakeholders and material to the industry’s impacts. If you are a personal care brand, public social sustainability goals around improving access to hygiene could make sense, but it might not make sense for you to have public goals around “ending hunger”, as it won’t be perceived as authentic. Increasingly, ambitious goals are also more relevant. Easy, table-stakes goals aren’t seen as relevant by sustainability conscious consumers anymore. If you’re leaving big issues like climate change or plastic pollution unmentioned in your sustainability commitments, they are less likely to be relevant to that audience. Likewise, goals that might not be relevant for a wider audience include: highly technical and/or material-specific goals, optimization goals that are not explicitly linked to environmental impact, goals that are in conflict with publicly made commitments, or goals that function primarily as virtue signaling.

As sustainability goals continue to evolve within the sustainable packaging industry, this framework could help organizations determine whether or not it makes sense to publish their existing goals and ensure that they will be meaningful to outside stakeholders. The FASTER framework is designed to help evaluate whether or not a goal makes sense for external communications or if it might be better suited for internal communication with more knowledgeable partners. If a goal is a good fit for being shared externally, keeping the FASTER framework in mind can help create meaningful conversation about sustainability efforts, rather than confusing consumers.

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Methodology Matters https://sustainablepackaging.org/2022/05/18/methodology-matters/ Wed, 18 May 2022 16:21:44 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/?p=654

Methodology Matters – Resource Recycling

Recycling research is vital to making data-informed packaging and sustainability decisions. Different approaches to methodology and measurement in recycling research have, however, led to some disagreement within the sustainability field.

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SPC Releases Comprehensive Update of its Centralized Availability of Recycling Study https://sustainablepackaging.org/2021/07/30/spc-releases-comprehensive-update-of-its-centralized-availability-of-recycling-study/ Fri, 30 Jul 2021 15:19:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/07/27/the-road-to-decarbonization-will-likely-be-lined-by-trees-copy/

When Sustainable Packaging Coalition (SPC) initially published its Centralized Availability of Recycling Study in 2016, no comprehensive study of its kind had ever been completed. The research informed and guided meaningful conversation on recycling programs and packaging acceptance for recycling in the years since. Today, SPC releases a comprehensive update of this study.

This study investigates residential recycling programs across 1,950 communities in the United States to gather information on the availability of curbside and drop-off collection programs and the acceptance of 32 types of packaging formats in those programs.

Understanding the acceptance of packaging in residential recycling programs is one vital aspect in assessing the likelihood that a certain packaging type will be recycled. This information serves a variety of purposes, including guiding improvements to recycling systems, informing packaging decisions, and substantiating one aspect of packaging recyclability claims.

KEY FINDINGS

  • This study found that 91% of US residents have access to either curbside and/or drop-off recycling programs that accept packaging materials. This is a decrease from the 94% of US residents who had access to either curbside and/or drop off recycling programs in our 2016 Centralized Study on Availability of Recycling.
  • Access to recycling programs varied by housing type; 23% of US residents who live in multi-family housing had no access to recycling programs, while only 3% of US residents who live in single family homes had no access to recycling programs that accept packaging materials.
  • US residents’ access to recycling programs for specific packaging formats was also assessed. Access to recycling declined for all package types as compared to the 2016 study.
  • Package formats with the greatest amount of recycling access included: steel food cans (87%), aluminum beverage cans (with deposit 90%, without deposit 89%), corrugated boxes (88%), paperboard boxes (84%), PET bottles (beverage bottles with deposit 88%, other PET bottles without deposit 87%), and HDPE bottles (87%).
  • Package formats with the least amount of recycling access included aluminum foil and foil packaging (37%) and rigid PS packaging (45%).
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Produce Stickers: The Benefits of Going Compostable https://sustainablepackaging.org/2021/05/19/produce-stickers-the-benefits-of-going-compostable/ Wed, 19 May 2021 10:46:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/07/26/produce-stickers-a-small-but-mighty-problem-copy/

Unlocking the benefits of compostable produce stickers for broader circular economy efforts.

How might something as small as a produce sticker help divert more food scraps and prevent methane in landfills? One solution involves compostability. In part 2 of this produce sticker series, we explored compostable produce stickers as one possible alternative to traditional plastic produce stickers. While there are just a handful of compostable sticker options currently available on the market, more investment and brand commitment could make compostable produce stickers a promising tool to compost more food, improve compost quality, and eliminate this common non-recyclable plastic. 

What are the benefits of transitioning to compostable produce stickers? 

Addressing a big problem at composting facilities.

By some measures, produce stickers are part of the “big three” of contaminants at composting facilities. In the Washington report on contamination, facilities identified non-compostable produce stickers as one of the top five most persistent contaminants in their facilities, i.e., items that resist identification and/or removal, showing up in finished compost. Composters spend a significant amount of time educating their customers about the need to remove plastic produce stickers, as well as dealing with the stickers when they inevitably come into their facility. 

According to European Environment Agency briefing documents, replacing conventional plastics with certified compostable plastics for items that are often mixed with, or attached to, food waste can help reduce contamination with conventional plastics, and produce stickers are a key place to start. 

Enabling more composting, which in turn reduces methane emissions.  

Because of the contamination problems outlined above, compostable produce stickers would make it easier for composters to accept food waste from pre-consumer and post-consumer sources. Composting has numerous benefits for the environment, including helping to divert food waste out of landfill, where they generate methane emissions, and instead create a soil amendment that helps sequester carbon. Today’s composting is hampered by contamination issues, and proactively addressing them would enable more material to be processed at composting facilities. 

Serving as an “olive branch” to composters. 

Some composters feel that they are being forced to accept compostable packaging, such as compostable food serviceware and bin liners, while receiving little support to deal with contamination or increased processing costs. By addressing one of composters’ biggest contaminants, the compostable packaging and produce industries would be supporting the profitability and viability of the composting industry. This would help create a more positive relationship between groups, demonstrating care for the quality of finished compost, and serve as an example for other compostable products. 

Given these compelling benefits for composters, consumers, and society’s circular economy goals, it’s worth trying to understand why compostable produce stickers haven’t yet reached scale. Research on this question is limited, but a number of factors appear to be at play. These barriers to adoption include: 

Limited number of solutions providers.

A key barrier to scalability is that there are a limited number of solutions providers. In 2017, a Washington State Organics Contamination Reduction Workgroup report determined that “although there are compostable stickers available, the market has not yet reached sufficient scale to provide a viable alternative to conventional stickers.” Since that time, the landscape of manufacturers has not changed substantially, although more retailers have trialled solutions. Presumably, this means that today’s compostable produce stickers are also cost-prohibitive. As more solutions come on the market and are adopted more widely, they become more cost-effective to manufacture. 

Cost and logistical challenges to adoption for retailers and packers.

In one survey of 63 fruit processors, sticker manufacturers, and other stakeholders, respondents felt switching to more sustainable alternatives to produce stickers would be made more challenging by infrastructure, machinery, and product efficiency and large-scale application. For example, the sticker applicator and substrate are often sold together, so switching to an alternative product may require costly changes to equipment. Compostable stickers themselves are also likely to be more expensive – according to a source at Sinclair, the price of the Sinclair EcoLabel is about two times that of standard labels manufactured by the company. While this is in part due to today’s low demand and production, it is likely that price parity will not be achieved until adoption is much more widespread.

Misaligned incentives and limited demand.

The cost-savings associated with compostable produce stickers are expected to be seen primarily by composters, rather than the growers and retailers who implement these solutions. Although compostable produce stickers may be in line with these companies’ sustainable packaging goals to use less non-recyclable plastic, produce stickers are not yet widely recognized as an unnecessary single-use plastic. This creates a misalignment of incentives, whereby growers and retailers are the ones paying more for compostable produce stickers in the short-term and receiving more intangible benefits in the long-term. In the same survey of processors and manufacturers, “lack of demand” was named as a barrier to alternative produce stickers. 

These barriers have prevented compostable produce stickers from gaining widespread adoption, but change is on the horizon. Bans on plastic produce stickers are set to go into effect, consumers are likely to grow increasingly frustrated, and composters may become stricter about not accepting stickered food waste. 

The time has come for retailers, packers, and the produce value chain to turn to alternative solutions. By setting goals to phase out plastic produce stickers, the produce value chain can signal it’s ready to explore new innovations that benefit consumers and help keep more food waste out of landfills.

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If you’d like to join the conversation about produce stickers, reach out to Olga Kachook, Senior Manager, olga.kachook@greenblue.org 

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Produce Stickers: Are They the Next Straw? https://sustainablepackaging.org/2021/05/12/produce-stickers-are-they-the-next-straw/ Wed, 12 May 2021 10:43:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/07/26/produce-stickers-a-small-but-mighty-problem-copy/

This second post in our produce sticker series explores innovative alternatives.

Why did straws become the poster child for single-use plastic pollution? Perhaps it was because  they are unnecessary for most consumers, nearly impossible to recycle, and commonly littered. Interestingly, many of these same characteristics apply to produce stickers, which are well-positioned to become the “next straw” in the fight against single-use plastics. 

Just like straws, plastic produce stickers are frustrating to many consumers and cause waste management problems. Because they contaminate the composting process, plastic produce stickers cause real environmental damage, dooming stickered produce to continually end up in landfills. The benefits, challenges, and current state of plastic produce stickers was discussed in the first part of this series on plastic produce stickers. 

With new legislation banning these items on the horizon, it is time for retailers, packers, and the produce value chain to turn to alternative solutions to plastic produce stickers. Through partnerships and investment, the produce value chain can explore some of the following innovations. 

What are some alternatives to plastic produce stickers? 

Laser Printing

The most promising alternative to using produce stickers is laser printing, sometimes also known as “natural branding”. This method uses laser light to mark fruit and vegetables, and can add both letters and images to a piece of fruit or vegetable by removing the pigment from the peel’s outer layer. It is a superficial process that does not affect the product’s flavor, aroma, or shelf life, and the laser-tagged part remains edible. 

Laser printing has made notable advancements in Europe, with interest shown to the technology as early as 2010 through the EU’s Entrepreneurship and Innovation Programme. According to the EU-funded project, laser labeling could actually be faster than the standard method. Laser printing technology also eliminates the need to use paper, plastic, ink, adhesives, and the large scale application of this technology may enable reduction of GHG emissions. 

A number of European retailers have been trialing these laser technologies. In 2016, Netherlands-based laser technology company Eosta and Swedish supermarket ICA ran a trial of organic fruit and vegetables with natural branding, which they claimed replaced millions of pieces of plastic packaging. In 2017, Delhaize was the first retailer in Belgium to use laser printing, and in 2021 it reported that it will be making the switch to laser printing for 12 of its organic products. In 2018, Dutch supermarket chain Jumbo debuted the process on its organic ginger, zucchini, and butternut squash. In 2019, Austrian grocer SPAR introduced laser-labeled mangoes, after having initially piloted laser-labeled avocados in 2017 but ultimately scrapping the program due to “under-developed technology.” 

While the advantages of using laser printing seem great, a key downside is that it requires a wholesale switch from stickering equipment to laser printing equipment, with subsequent changes in cost and labor. Laser printing is not suitable for delicate produce, such as tomatoes. Some of the laser printing technologies may also not be suitable for produce such as oranges, mandarins, lemons and pomegranates, because the peel of those fruits can heal the laser imprint, rendering the marking invisible after some time. However, it is possible to counter this by spraying liquid on the fruit skin after the mark has been made by the laser to trigger a reaction that becomes visible. 

Ink-based Printing

Printing ink on the fruit or vegetable directly eliminates the need for face stock resources and adhesives. Vegetable ink-based tattoos are considered safe and do not pose any health concerns. Capexo in France has developed a process for printing food-grade ink on the skin of almost all fruit and vegetables, adding a barcode, price or any other consumer information. It works well for fruits and vegetables with a relatively smooth skin, such as mangoes. This technology would not work as well for other types of more rough produce, such as pineapple or avocado. Another drawback is that ink labels are not entirely moisture resistant and can potentially rub off when coming in contact with water or moisture.

Compostable Produce Stickers

Compostable produce stickers are not yet widely available. However, at least two manufacturers have market-ready compostable produce stickers. In 2015, Elevate Packaging, a sustainable packaging and label technology company, entered into an exclusive distribution agreement for North America with Bio4Life, a Dutch company that produces compostable adhesive products and labels under the brand name PURE Labels. These labels are certified to the European compost standard EN13432 for industrial composting, the North American BPI certification for industrial composting, and are approved for direct food contact. 

Sinclair, a large produce labeling company, has been trialing compostable stickers since 2008, and produced its first 100% certified compostable sticker, called EcoLabel, in 2019. All the components, including the face stock, adhesive, and ink passed testing to show compliance with EN 13432, and is certified by TÜV Austria under the OK Compost – Industrial and Seedling certification. 

A handful of retailers and growers have explored using compostable stickers, primarily in New Zealand, Ireland, and the Netherlands. In 2019, produce importer Fyffes launched a banana band made from paper that was fully compostable and sourced from certified Forestry Stewardship Council approved sources. It was successfully trialled in real-life market conditions in retail outlets in Ireland.

In 2019, Bostock New Zealand, an organic apple grower, said it planned to roll out more industrially-compostable stickers in 2020 after a successful trial. It claimed to be the first apple grower in the Southern Hemisphere to do so. New Zealand kiwi marketer Zespri also reported that it had been trialling the Sinclair EcoLabel prototype since 2010, but planned to use the labels commercially in 2020 on all of its organic kiwi fruit.

In 2020, PLUS, a Netherlands-based co-op of nearly 270 stores, reported that it was now offering Fairtrade bananas wrapped with a compostable band and Dutch apples and pears with “biodegradable” stickers. The Dutch fruit cooperative Fruitmasters also offers a brand of apples that use compostable produce stickers. These apples were showcased to the Dutch royal couple in 2019 as part of innovations in “fully plastic-free fruit packaging”. 

Though not yet mainstream, innovations and alternatives to plastic produce stickers are being developed by pioneering manufacturers, produce brands, and retailers. In our final post, we’ll explore the benefits of compostable alternatives to produce stickers, and the barriers that need to be overcome in order for solutions to scale.

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Produce Stickers: A Small but Mighty Problem https://sustainablepackaging.org/2021/05/05/produce-stickers-a-small-but-mighty-problem/ Wed, 05 May 2021 20:38:00 +0000 https://sustainablepackaging.org/2023/07/26/the-road-to-decarbonization-will-likely-be-lined-by-trees-copy/

This is the first in a series of posts exploring plastic produce stickers and more sustainable alternatives

 


 

Plastic produce stickers are ubiquitous. Used on a variety of produce, the stickers are helpful at checkout because they carry important information: price look-up codes, or PLU codes. The International Federation for Produce Standards determines these PLU codes, which have been in use since 1990, with 1400+ codes assigned.

While most PLU stickers are about the size of a quarter, these little plastic stickers pose a huge issue for composters processing food waste. Known as contamination, they are a problem both for composters that accept pre-consumer food waste, such as from grocery stores, as well as post-consumer food waste, such as from residential composting programs. In the case of grocery store food waste, plastic produce stickers make it challenging to accept and process large quantities of off-spec or spoiled produce. This can result in truckloads of produce being turned away from composting facilities and instead sent to landfills, where it will generate methane emissions.

Produce stickers are also a very common contaminant in the residential food waste stream, since consumers may not remember to remove them from peels and skins. Many composters choose to continuously remind consumers to remove them, and to even incentivize this behavior through games and compost giveaways. Other composters, however, say that removing stickers is too burdensome for their consumers.

Because produce stickers are small, they cannot be removed with the equipment that is often used to remove other types of contaminants, such as Trommel screens or depackaging equipment. In some cases, composters dedicate staff resources to manually remove items with stickers. When plastic produce stickers end up in the finished compost, they are both a visual contaminant and a microplastic, making it difficult for composters to sell their product.

Various media outlets have been trying to raise awareness about the problem of plastic produce stickers for nearly a decade: Grist in 2013, the NY Times in 2015, Fast Company and The Guardian in 2017, Food and Wine, Modern Farmer, Stuff, and CBC in 2018, Fresh Plaza in 2019, Real Simple and CBC again in 2020, and most recently, Greenmatters and KMUW in 2021. Some of these outlets refer to the nuisance of having to remove these produce stickers, and consumer frustration can be seen across platforms. However, at this time, the negative consumer experience is not widely acknowledged by brands and retailers.

There have been some efforts made to ban conventional plastic produce stickers, as well as voluntary industry efforts to remove them. In 2017, a BC effort to ban produce stickers and replace them with compostable options, vegetable inks, or “food safe stamps”, was met with skepticism and ultimately did not succeed. Some of the general public felt the tiny stickers were not a big deal and the city should focus on other issues.

In 2019, Fresh Plaza reported that all of Britain’s major supermarkets, including Tesco, Waitrose, Sainsbury’s, Morrissons and Asda had signed on to the non-profit WRAP’s “Plastic Pledge”, which included a commitment to removing unnecessary plastics “including stickers on fruit and vegetables” by 2020. Information on this commitment, or retailer updates regarding progress on this 2020 goal, could not be found.

Legislation that attempts to address plastic produce stickers is on the horizon. France became the first country to ban produce stickers unless they are compostable. This law will go into effect on January 1, 2022. In the United States, a proposed ban on non-compostable produce stickers is included in the proposed Break Free From Plastic Pollution Act. In New Zealand, the Auckland City Council has also proposed a ban on non-compostable produce stickers.

In this blog series, we’ll consider whether produce stickers might be the “next straw” in the fight against single-use plastics, and explore the landscape of innovations serving as alternatives to plastic produce stickers.

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