Live from Smithers' Sustainability in Packaging US: Paper Cap/Closures Soon to be a Reality?

It's unusual for PW to cover pre-commercialized projects. But at Smithers' Sustainability in Packaging US event today in Chicago, we saw a paper-based beverage cap application that's closer to in-market than we'd have thought.

A poly liner (2-4%) will still be used as the project scales, using low-hanging fruit functionality as the project scales.
A poly liner (2-4%) will still be used as the project scales, using low-hanging fruit functionality as the project scales.

Blue Ocean Closures, a Swedish startup backed by Austria’s ALPLA Group and American Glatfelter, seeks to disrupt the beverage, specialty food, and cosmetics packaging markets by introducing a high-end, molded fiber bottle or closure/screw cap/screw lid that’s both recyclable and ocean biodegradable.

Rightly or wrongly, plastics of all stripes have landed between many brands’ crosshairs, and plastic packaging reduction is a part of many CPG corporate sustainability goals for 2025, 2030, and beyond. 

“We are helping brand owners reduce plastic, to achieve their goals to reduce plastic,” Lars Sandberg, CEO, said in a session attended by PW. “And that, of course, makes it a good business opportunity. We want to achieve a big impact, but we also want to inspire others.”

The million-dollar (potentially billion-dollar) question is the company’s approach to barrier properties, considering the closure is destined for liquid or viscous product applications. Recognizing that it’s not the perfect approach, rather the “low-hanging-fruit” approach that will advance the concept and situate it for a better solution in the future, the company has opted for a thin top-seal plastic liner, the same that’s used in metal closures.

“That of course could be a biodegradable PHA or PHP [bio-derived polyhyroxyalkanoates or polyhydroxybutyrate], or it could be the liner that is needed to pack certain products. It just gives us the freedom to move to market.”

The low-hanging-fruit approach extends to the closure itself, which is made of high quality, readily available virgin fiber instead of recycled, shorter-strand fiber. But the virgin fiber comes from FSC-certified sources, and the company seeks to potentially move into recycled fiber at some point. Sandberg said to expect further innovation as it the company grows. But at the moment, the start-up seeks to remove as much complexity from the system as possible to begin to scale around its core concept. As he sees it, there are three keys to the success of the overall concept, and shortening the time-to-market.

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