Monobloc 'cleans up' for Cyprus company

Cyprus-based beverage producer Lanitis Bros. Ltd. is first to use a monobloc bottle-blowing, -filling, and -capping system for fresh, pasteurized milk in PET.

Plant manager Doros Cleanthous holds filled bottles of milk, one of which is shown close-up.
Plant manager Doros Cleanthous holds filled bottles of milk, one of which is shown close-up.

An ultraclean blow-fill system for PET bottles of fresh, pasteurized milk has helped Lanitis Bros. Ltd. of Nicosia, Cyprus, add sales of dairy products to its existing business in soft drink and juice beverages.

The launch of milk in PET was made possible with the addition of a new Combi monobloc blow-fill-cap system from Sidel (Norcross, GA). According to Lanitis and Sidel, the Cyprus application represents the first use of the Combi system in the world for fresh, pasteurized milk. The SRP 8/36/12 Combi system is part of a €10 million investment in the facility that includes a Sidel blower, and a filler from Remy, part of the Filling Systems Div. of Sidel. There are also a capper from Arol (Canelli, Italy), a Model 12 T S1 E1 labeler from Kosme (Roverbella, Mantova, Italy), a TSP30 shrink wrapper and P421.10 palletizing equipment from Cermex (Norcross, GA), and a model HS 30 Helix pallet stretch wrapper from Robopac (Villa Verucchio, Italy).

First operational last October, the Combi produces 1-L PET bottles for 3% whole milk, 1.5% reduced-fat milk, less than .1% skim milk, and more recently, a calcium-fortified milk. The machine also is used for 250-mL chocolate milk. The bottles are available in retail outlets in most of Cyprus, located in the eastern Mediterranean.

Doros Cleanthous, plant manager at Lanitis, explains that the desire for differentiation led to the company’s selection of PET bottles for the firm’s entry into the dairy market. He says that fresh, pasteurized milk, which is popular among the 670ꯠ residents of the island and among the nearly three million annual tourists, was previously sold only in brick paperboard cartons.

Unlike brick packs in the United States, the carton structure used in Cyprus does not include aluminum and is not filled aseptically. It’s not intended to be a shelf-stable item. “In Cyprus,” he notes, “long-life milk is almost nonexistent.”

Like the brick-style cartons of pasteurized milk against which Lanitis is competing, the PET bottles sold by Lanitis will have a five-day “sell-by” date. In reality, the PET bottles can last to 15 days or so under reliable refrigeration, which is close to the sell-by dates commonly used for fresh milk in the United States. But a long-standing government policy in Cyprus forbids milk producers from coding fresh milk with anything beyond a five-day sell-by date.

Cleanthous is excited about the advantages he thinks the PET bottles bring to Lanitis. “We felt that if we entered the milk market with the same type of package, we’d be seen as just poor relatives of the competition, and it would have been difficult for us to persuade consumers that our product is better, new, and different,” he recalls. “We needed a package to differentiate ourselves.” The bottle provided that uniqueness.

“Secondly,” he continues, “we selected a bottle because it provides maximum convenience. It’s easy for consumers to handle, especially for small kids and the elderly. The bottle is resealable and can be put back into the refrigerator in any position, not just right side up.”

Cleanthous relates that PET was selected “because it has the clarity of glass. You can see the white milk. When you buy milk in a carton here, it’s in a box and not visible. Seeing the milk through this package gives consumers a more favorable and confident impression. It’s a bit of psychology,” he admits, “but it makes a difference. The bottle stands out from the others.”

One of the reasons the bottle is noteworthy in the former British colony is that it presents a nostalgic allure. “The bottle resembles the glass milk bottle that was used many years ago when milk was delivered door to door. That was a tradition in Cyprus, and it was famous in England.” For the same reason, similar “old-fashioned” milk bottle shapes have been used for plastic-bottled milks sold in the United States.

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