Innovation is king

The winning entries of the Flexible Packaging Association’s 57th annual Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards feature innovative enhancements that integrate consumer trends and needs with technical advancements in materials, graphics, structure, and sustainability to produce outstanding flexible packaging solutions. In all, 78 flexible packages were submitted into the 2013 competition by 29 flexible packaging companies. Of those, 25 packages will be honored with 29 FPA Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards within one or more categories including Packaging Excellence, Printing Achievement, Technical Innovation, and Environmental & Sustainability Achievement.

Kraft YES Pack for 1-gal portions of salad dressing used in foodservice institutions received the Highest Achievement Award in the 2013 Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards.
Kraft YES Pack for 1-gal portions of salad dressing used in foodservice institutions received the Highest Achievement Award in the 2013 Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards.

Highest achievement to Kraft YES pack


It won a Food & Beverage Product Innovation Award from the National Restaurant Association and a DuPont Silver for Innovation in the annual DuPont Awards. Now the Kraft YES Pack for 1-gal portions of salad dressing used in foodservice institutions received the Highest Achievement Award in the 2013 Flexible Packaging Achievement Awards.


“Our goal in designing this product was to better meet the daily needs of operators,” says Stacey Rychlewski, business manager at Kraft Foods. “The cutting edge design of the YES Pack significantly improves back-of-the-house efficiencies while maximizing product yield, and we are honored to be recognized for that.”


This package goes all the way back to 2007, when Kraft challenged its suppliers to come up with an improvement on the rigid plastic container and threaded closure that has been the mainstay in this product category for so many years. Launched commercially in January of 2012, the package’s name is an acronym for its key deliverables: Yield, Ease of use, and Sustainability. The use of flexible materials in the package allows the operator to squeeze product out of the package for better yield. The two-handled design allows for easy carrying and precision pouring. And the manufacturing and transportation of the flexible package when compared to the rigid jug brings an improvement in energy use and reduced carbon dioxide emissions.


Key suppliers behind the innovative pouch are Exopack and Smart Bottle Inc.. Smart Bottle is the developer of the technology, while Exopack makes the rollstock that Kraft uses to form pouches and fill them.


Notable is the seal design around the handles, which keeps them stable during the pouring process. The spout fitment is sized to promote a more direct flow of product into dressing cups for use at the restaurant table. When the dressing has been completely dispensed, the flattened pouch takes up 86% less space in the restaurant’s waste receptacle.


Precise material configurations on the four-side-sealed pouch are considered proprietary, but it appears that the Exopack material is a lamination of reverse-printed nylon and metallocene sealant. Designing a structure with the ability to seal through multiple layers of materials while maintaining adequate caulking around fitments and corner apexes were critical elements of material design. That the package is able to pass the required drop tests speaks to the high quality of its seals.


Points scored on the sustainability front are also impressive. Kraft claims the package uses 50% less energy to manufacturer when compared to its rigid counterpart, takes up 50% less landfill space, uses 60% less plastic, and generates 70% fewer carbon dioxide emissions during transportation of film to Kraft packaging lines.


Gorgeous printing for gourmet snack


One of three entries to win Gold for Printing Achievement in the FPA Awards Competition was Lima, Peru-based Peruplast S.A. for its Kusi Wayta package. Kusi Wayta is a new gourmet product from P&D Andina, also in Lima, that features native Peruvian fruits dipped in chocolate. Introduced in February of 2012, the 140-g-oz package sells for about $6.00.


This is a pre-made bag that Peruplast supplies to P&D Andina. Prior to bag making, Peruplast adhesive laminates the bag material, which is a three-layer lamination of 12-micron polyester/7-micron foil/sealant layer.


The polyester is first reverse-printed on a gravure press in seven colors. Featuring native motifs and landmarks, the graphics effectively communicate both the native characteristics and the gourmet quality of the product inside. In the same pass, Peruplast also surface prints the polyester with a matte lacquer that covers selected areas of the artwork on the opposite side. As a result, what meets the consumer’s eye in the retail setting is not only the beautiful seven-color gravure-printed graphics but also a striking combination of matte and glossy effects.


According to brand manager Alvaro Carbonel, the package is a perfect combination of function and appearance. “You need a strong package for the preservation of the product, yet it must be appealing to the eye of the consumer,” says Carbonel.


Pouch packaging program accentuates consumer recycling guidance


The recyclable, recloseable stand-up pouch application developed in cooperation with biodegradable laundry detergent marketer Savvy Green™, St. Petersburg, FL, has won an FPA Gold Award in Environmental & Sustainability Achievement for Ampac Flexibles.


The Ampac No. 2  Savvy Green Pouch is being touted as the first primary flexible package to participate in the HOW2RECYCLE program, providing consumers a path to recycling flexible packaging. The pouches are made from a proprietary coextruded high-density polyethylene blend and a small amount of non-HDPE resin to enhance pouch material processing. The small amount of non-HDPE resin does not interfere with recycling.


These pouches can be recycled along with other HDPE products in municipalities with recycling programs as well as at retail stores with drop-off stations for HDPE shopping bags. In addition, there are several internet sites that can guide consumers to the nearest drop-off points and curbside recycling facilities in their areas.


The Ampac No. 2 Pouch has been approved by Trex® Company, a manufacturer that uses recycled plastic bag packaging to create decking and railing products. Trex currently is the largest plastic bag recycler in the U.S.


The recyclable Savvy Green Pouch is made at Ampac’s manufacturing plant in Seattle, WA.  Ampac receives the HDPE resin by rail and extrudes it into sheeting. The sheeting then is printed on one of Ampac’s 10-color presses and converted into pouches. During the manufacturing process, all trim and rejected films or pouches are reprocessed for the manufacture of can liners. By using a coextruded film, Ampac eliminates a lamination processing step, saving materials and energy.


These pouches are designed for improved stiffness, drop strength, and moisture barrier. They are surface-printed in high-definition 9 to 10-color flexographics with solvent-based inks, then matte varnish over-coated.


Mary Allen, co-owner of Savvy Green reports, “We were looking for distinctive-looking, consumer-convenient packaging that could meet our environmentally friendly standards and also provide moisture barrier to prevent clumping of the powdered soap. The recyclable, zipper-recloseable Ampac No. 2 Pouch meets those criteria. It protects our product, reduces the amount of packaging material required to produce containers, is space-efficient in shipping, warehousing, and store shelf stocking, and is easy for consumers to open, reclose, and recycle. It’s also extremely attractive on the store shelf.


“We introduced the packaging for our laundry detergent in October 2012. We are so pleased with the packaging’s market performance that we are introducing powdered dish-washer soap and oxygen brightening laundry detergent in the same pouches in March 2013.”


In addition to the Savvy Green detergent, other Ampac No. 2 Pouch commercial applications already include such diverse products as sugar, sugar substitutes, and cat litter, with more applications in the works. Ampac provides its user customers advice on strict adherence to FTC guidelines for labeling the No. 2 Pouch in terms of recyclable claims as well as about how to participate in the HOW2RECYCLE labeling program.

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