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Co-packer Deploys Packaging Innovations for Brita Premium Purified Water

B Water & Beverages works with Brita to design sustainable packaging for its first retail bottled water product that includes a sturdy, striking, refillable, recyclable aluminum bottle and a plastic-free paperboard carrier that is also fully recyclable.

Brita Premium Purified Water for retail is packaged in an aluminum bottle with a paperboard carrier for its multipacks.
Brita Premium Purified Water for retail is packaged in an aluminum bottle with a paperboard carrier for its multipacks.

For more than 30 years, Brita has served its customers by providing faucet filtration and filter pitcher systems that improve the taste and quality of tap water and offer a sustainable alternative to single-use plastic bottles. Using a Brita® system to filter water results in four-times fewer greenhouse gas emissions than drinking bottled water and can eliminate the use of 1,800 single-use plastic bottles per year per household.

Given the brand’s strong sustainability position, when it considered putting a bottled water product into the retail market, it needed packaging that continued this commitment. By carefully vetting packaging materials and suppliers, it was able to introduce its product in a packaging format that—from container to carrier—uses the latest packaging innovation to provide a sustainable option to single-use plastic water bottles.


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Brita’s Premium Purified Water, which launched in a number of large grocery chains nationwide in 2021, is packaged in a durable, refillable, plastic-free aluminum bottle, in an 18- and a 25-oz size, from Trivium Packaging. For its multipacks, Brita uses a unique, fully-recyclable paperboard carrier, the Fishbone from Atlantic Packaging, that uses less than half the material of a paperboard carton.

The culmination of the package was made possible by B Water & Beverages, Inc., a co-manufacturer/packager (CM&P) of water in aluminum bottles and cans located in San Fernando, Calif. B Water worked with Trivium to ensure the manufacture of a plastic-free bottle and introduced Brita to the Fishbone carrier, installing a custom, 600-can/min automatic applicator designed by Serpa Packaging Solutions, a ProMach product brand, to create the plastic-free multipack.

Impact-extruded aluminum facilitates reusability

B Water & Beverages, led by company president Jennifer Brooks, operates a 45,000-sq-ft, state-of-the-art facility equipped with two fully-automated packaging lines, the most recent one installed for Brita. B Water’s first line is dedicated to Blue Can 50-Year Shelf Life Emergency Water in 12- and 32-oz aluminum cans. Given B Water’s expertise in handling water in aluminum, Brita reached out to the company in 2020 to produce Brita Water. Says Brooks, after much due diligence, Brita selected B Water as the exclusive manufacturer of its new retail product.

According to Brooks, Brita had researched several packaging options before deciding upon aluminum. The first was glass. “But glass has its issues,” says Brooks. Among them, its heavy weight and shatter-ability. Another material it looked at was the multilayer carton. “But, that’s not sustainable either because for one, it has a plastic cap, which is not good for marine life, and two, it’s lined with aluminum, which makes it quite complicated to recycle,” she says.

Jennifer Brooks, President, B Water & BeveragesJennifer Brooks, President, B Water & Beverages“Aluminum, then, became the material of choice due to its light weight, durability, and infinite recyclability,” Brooks explains. From there, B Water worked with supplier Trivium to develop a refillable aluminum container, which was a primary goal of Brita’s. Collectively, the team decided on an impact-extruded bottle.

Explains Trivium Packaging VP – Head of Global Beverage Ryan Noward, two factors make impact-extruded bottles preferred for refill applications. “First, bottles produced from this technology provide the sturdiness that allows them to withstand multiple uses,” he says. “Second, in the impact-extrusion process, we have the ability to apply liners in a very specific manner, which provides the best internal coverage for the bottle.”

Brooks describes the bottle as a cross between a soda can and a stainless-steel bottle. “So, where stainless steel is very hard—you really can’t crush it with your hands—and a soda can is easily crushed, the impact-extruded can is in-between in terms of thickness and durability.”

Testing the bottle over a three-week period, B Water found it could be uncapped, emptied, refilled, and recapped without any degradation to the bottle liner, the bottle, or the cap. “So it’s definitely refillable, and that’s really the key to help with saving the planet,” says Brooks. “It’s about reducing or eliminating single-use containers of any kind, but especially plastic.”

B Water has found that consumers often drink the water and then refill the bottle throughout the day, on-the-go, to meet their recommended daily intake of water.

Supplier expertise enables plastic-free bottle

B Water wanted a 100% aluminum bottle so that it would be curbside-recyclable. In selecting a bottle supplier, Brooks says that one of the things that attracted B Water to Trivium was their willingness to work with the CM&P to drive innovation. Traditionally, with larger aluminum bottles such as the 25-oz size, a plastic outsert is needed on the neck of the bottle to receive the aluminum closure.

Trivium developed, and then made a significant investment in, the capability to produce metal threads directly onto the bottle. According to Noward, it’s less about the equipment and more about the technical know-how. “While there was new equipment involved, the bulk of the effort came in the form of engineering and development work,” he says. “Tom Chupak, Keith Mitchell, Nicole Gailey, and the broader R&D and Innovation team in Youngstown [Ohio] worked tirelessly to develop this capability.

“Forming metal threads on a bottle is a complicated, difficult process that Trivium’s years of experience in impact extrusion allowed us to execute. Once the technology was developed, Plant Manager Michael Wood and the operations team dialed in on how to produce the bottles at scale.”


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Says Brooks, “We were the first ones to have fully 100% aluminum bottles with no plastic outsert and closures form-threaded directly onto the neck of the bottle. So we were excited about that, and we’re thrilled about our partnership with Trivium as well.”

Trivium also prints the bottles in-line as part of the production process. Says Noward, the company can print aluminum bottles in up to nine colors “with photorealistic quality.” The Brita bottle is a beautiful example of this. The slim, column-shaped container has a deep ocean-blue background, with a darker blue pattern throughout that makes the bottle appear as if it’s covered in water droplets. The copy is white, with the Brita logo running vertically along the front panel. On the back are printed icons, accompanied by copy that reads, “Refillable Bottle,” “Superior 10-Step Filtration,” “Every Bottle Gives Back” (proceeds from every purchase are used to support environmental solutions), and “Infinitely Recyclable.” The all-aluminum cap, supplied by G3 Enterprises, is the same blue as the bottle.

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