Sustainability and the new age of systems thinking

The packaging sustainability conversation has moved beyond recyclability, renewable materials, and clean energy to thinking about logistics, supply chains, and environmental impacts as integrated systems.

A specially designed 12-ct corrugated case for small-volume winery Terrien provides a more sustainable packaging solution.
A specially designed 12-ct corrugated case for small-volume winery Terrien provides a more sustainable packaging solution.

From one perspective, it’s all about energy. Where are the sources of energy waste that can be eliminated from the system?

Because sustainability is still not a primary driver for many brands, suppliers have to push hard to promote options that are both better for the environment and better for the bottom line. One positive that offers some hope is that consumers seem to appreciate sustainability gains such as lightweighting and recycled content, and brands can build sustainability into their core values. Here are some more tips on how to start thinking about more efficient systems.

1. Establish a standard for yourself. Consult a testing lab, university, or nonprofit organization to both benchmark your current practices and discover opportunities to improve. At the minimum, itemize energy use, supply costs, material sources, and waste disposal costs to have a starting point. A comprehensive Life Cycle Analysis or a variation of a packaging sustainability scorecard is also useful when approaching retailers with your products and packages. For many fast-moving consumer goods, the bottom-line goal is simply fewer truck miles.

2. Right-size primary packaging. Whenever possible, work with product development to right-size the product in conjunction with the package. Consider both product and packaging as a system to maximize the quantity of product units, or case units, that can fit onto a pallet.

3. Be product and material neutral, or “agnostic.” Realize that vendors you consult will have their own biases, preferences, and interests in steering you in a particular direction. Focus on optimization of high performance with minimal materials, regardless of the substrate. But be practical. Study how packages are actually used. And remember stock components can have strong supply chain advantages because of availability, low minimums, and consistency.

4. Recognize the importance of production line speeds. Nothing impacts the bottom-line profitability of a fast-moving consumer good more than if it can’t be mass-produced, labeled, or filled quickly. For instance, the metal cans versus plastic cans equation comes down to the fact that plastic cans still cannot keep up with metal cans during the filling process because plastic cans cannot achieve the same high speeds. Similarly, the softness and pliability of flexible pouch materials do not stand up to the high-speed machine handling that would make them more cost-efficient.

5. Reduce or eliminate secondary shipping packaging. Well-designed primary packaging and shrink wrap can reduce shipping packaging significantly. For instance, some CPGs are upping their SBS from .16 to .22 or .24 so they can eliminate secondary cases or other pallet support packaging. Take advantage of volume savings. Saving 1/16 in. or
1/8 in. on height or width can result in substantial savings across product lines. And consider all the products that need packaging, not just the core product line. Potential cost and waste savings can be quickly estimated by quantifying exactly what is being shipped and how much excessive packaging is being used.

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