RTD Coffee Package Uses 30% Chemically Recycled PP

International dairy products company Emmi transitions to packaging with 30% rPP from chemical recycling for its Caffè Latte line of RTD iced coffee drinks in the U.K., becoming the first in the category to do so.

Beginning in September 2021, Emmi began offering its Caffè Latte RTD iced-coffee line in the U.K. in packaging made with 30% chemically recycled PP.
Beginning in September 2021, Emmi began offering its Caffè Latte RTD iced-coffee line in the U.K. in packaging made with 30% chemically recycled PP.

Emmi AG is a Swiss milk processor and dairy products company headquartered in Lucerne. The 110-plus-year-old international group manufactures a range of products, including cheese, yogurt, milk, ready-to-drink coffee beverages, and ice cream treats, for its own brands, as well as for private-label customers.

Like many of the world’s largest consumer packaged goods companies, Emmi has put sustainability at the center of its corporate strategy. In the area of packaging, it has set a target of 100% recyclability by 2027, with 30% of its packaging made from recycled-content material by that same year. But—also like many other CPGs—Emmi is facing an uphill battle when it comes to sourcing the quality and quantity of recycled plastic material it will need to meet its recycled-content goals.

Until recently, the only source for recycled plastic resin was through traditional mechanical recycling. While this technology works well for plastics such as PET and high-density polyethylene, used for packaging applications such as water bottles and milk jugs, respectively, it can’t handle mixed plastic waste, multilayer flexible packaging, and other difficult-to-recycle materials. Mechanical recycling is also limited in its ability to produce plastics with the same characteristics as its virgin counterparts, meaning that very few of these materials are approved for food-contact applications. It also means much of the material ends up being downcycled, incinerated, or landfilled.


Read article   Read this story on "Solutions for a Circular Plastics Economy"


But the advent of chemical recycling is beginning to change that. Viewed as complementary to mechanical recycling processes, chemical recycling—or advanced recycling—breaks plastics down into their building blocks and transforms them into valuable secondary raw materials that can be used to produce new chemicals and plastics with the same quality as those made from petroleum.

Although chemical recycling is still in its infancy and though most of the companies producing plastics from this process are still in the pilot phase, packaging made from chemically recycled plastic is beginning to show up on store shelves—albeit on a limited scale. Among the CPGs pioneering this new material is Emmi, which, by incorporating Borealis’s Borcycle™ C chemically recycled polypropylene into its packaging, has become the first brand in the RTD coffee category to use this material.

First in category for cPP

Emmi’s Caffè Latte brand is a line of “barista-quality” RTD iced coffee drinks in a range of flavors, such as Skinny, Macchiato, Cappuccino, and Vanilla. Packaging is an injection-molded polypropylene cup in two sizes—230 and 370 mL—with a PP lid and PET shrink sleeve, supplied by Greiner Packaging.

Beginning in September 2021, Emmi began offering its Caffè Latte line in the U.K. in packaging made with 30% chemically recycled polypropylene, or circular PP (cPP). Benedicht Zaugg, who is responsible for Sustainable Packaging at the company, says, “Emmi Caffè Latte is our strongest brand, and we wanted to be the first mover and driver in the category. In addition, the main target group of this brand also has a strong affinity for sustainability issues and appreciates appropriate measures.”

Beginning in September 2021, Emmi began offering its Caffè Latte RTD iced-coffee line in the U.K. in packaging made with 30% chemically recycled PP.Beginning in September 2021, Emmi began offering its Caffè Latte RTD iced-coffee line in the U.K. in packaging made with 30% chemically recycled PP.The cPP is supplied by polyolefins producer Borealis and is converted into cups by Greiner Packaging. Explains Zaugg, Greiner Packaging has supplied Emmi with packaging for its products, including its Caffè Latte line, for many years. “In the past, we have often worked together to find solutions to optimize our packaging and make it more sustainable,” he says. “Borealis is an important partner within our supply chain. With this project, we had a very intensive exchange.”

Because the supply of cPP is limited, Zaugg says the U.K. was chosen as the first market in which to release the packaging. “We decided to go for a ‘closed’ market like the U.K. to avoid complexity and to move forward quickly,” he says. “We also started with the U.K. because the use of recyclates in packaging is likely to be rewarded there in the future.”

Transformational recycling technology

The cPP used in Emmi’s packaging, Borcycle C, is part of Borealis’s Borcycle portfolio of what it calls “transformational recycling technology solutions,” which also includes its Borcycle™ M brand of mechanically recycled polymers. As part of its line of circular solutions, the Austria-based company also offers the Bornewables™ portfolio of plastics manufactured with renewable feedstocks.

As Trevor Davis, Head of Marketing, Consumer Products at Borealis, explains, the company’s strategy for recycled materials begins with mechanical recycling. Borealis operates three mechanical recycling plants in Europe: one focused on polyethylene in Wildon, Austria, one focused on PP in Niedergebra, Germany, and one in Lahnstein, Germany—a pilot plant developed in partnership with Tomra and German waste management company Zimmerman—focused on advanced mechanical recycling of both PE and PP. The Lahnstein plant, which processes both rigid and flexible post-consumer plastic, uses advanced technology to produce high-purity, low-odor, high product-consistency recycled materials for use in demanding applications in industries such as automotive and consumer products.

Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Discover the latest breakthrough packaging technologies shaping the pharmaceutical sector. This report dives into cutting-edge innovations, from smart containers that enhance patient safety to eco-friendly materials poised to transform the industry’s sustainability practices. All from PACK EXPO. Learn how forward-thinking strategies are driving efficiency and redefining what’s possible in pharma packaging.
Learn More
Pharmaceutical Innovations Report
Annual Outlook Report: Sustainability
The road ahead for CPGs in 2025 and beyond—Packaging World editors review key findings from a survey of 88 brand owners, CPG, and FMCG readers.
Download Now
Annual Outlook Report: Sustainability