Sustainable Packaging for Cannabis Grows

Cannabis CEO Blair Kralick discusses the importance of greater use of sustainable packaging in the market and the challenges of balancing eco-friendliness with regulations.

Blair Kralick, CEO, äkta
Blair Kralick, CEO, äkta

CEO Blair Kralick, whose cannabis company äkta recently launched its products in a recyclable, compostable paper tube, explains why it’s important for cannabis brands to reduce their packaging waste, as well as the challenges involved with selecting sustainable packaging that still meets the industry’s regulatory requirements.

Packaging World:

What are some of the challenges facing cannabis brands that want to use more sustainable packaging?

Blair Kralick:

One of the biggest challenges is the requirement for child-resistant (CR) packaging. That’s followed by requirements such as having opaque packaging—so not allowing your products to be seen through the outside of the package. In the beginning stages of the industry, we were very limited on what was child-resistant and what we could use to meet these requirements. A lot of the options were plastic and sometimes glass, things like that, but they always came with some type of plastic lid that was CR certified. It was difficult to find sustainable packaging that met state and local compliance regulations. That became such a big problem; I noticed even in the beginning stages that this was going to be a big deal—how wasteful this industry was going to end up being.

I wasn’t aware of the opaque requirement. Can you expand on that?

Some states, Colorado especially, have jumped on that. A few years ago, we could sell concentrates in a see-through glass jar. That recently changed. Now, it’s got to be opaque. When the industry first had to go opaque, a lot of packaging companies weren’t set up for it. So they were putting paint on the packaging. However, they were having problems where the paint would chip off and would get into the products.


Read article   Read this story on the development of akta's paper tube packaging.


Since we got into this market in 2014, there have been packaging requirement changes easily at least once a year, so we’re always having to change things on our packaging. We can’t order things in large quantities because you just never know when the state is going to come in and change the rules on you again. It’s been an uphill battle, but I think we’re finally starting to level off and get to a place where it works with the state, it works for us, it works for packaging companies, and everyone’s kind of on the same page.

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