Packaging’s Most Versatile, Sustainable Option

What would packaging look like if virgin plastics were made illegal?

Ben Miyares

That’s ultimately what plastic packaging’s harshest critics are pushing for. Single-use plastic packaging may be the current focus of their environmental animus, but nothing short of total eradication of polymers is their ultimate goal.

Eliminating just four popular packaging polymers—polyethylene, polyethylene terephthalate, polypropylene, and polystyrene—wouldn’t just wipe out all or most of the bottles on our grocery and drug store shelves, it would cause supply chain choke-ups and severely restrict the material choices from which we could build functional packaging structures.

Polymers’ relatively low-cost and high-performance profiles have made them practically indispensable and economically irreplaceable in packaging.

Tracking the 2018-2021 plastics-reducing actions of ten large consumer goods manufacturers (Nestlé, Procter & Gamble, PepsiCo, AB InterBev, Unilever, JBS, Tyson Foods, The Coca-Cola Co., Mars Incorporated, and L’Oréal), the Ellen MacArthur Foundation reported that the companies found switching from single-use packaging to reusables was the least effective way to reduce plastic packaging during the study period. Of the companies reporting moves away from single-use plastics, Coke had the greatest reduction in single-use plastics, 2.7%. The biggest drop in virgin plastic resin use among the 10 companies was achieved by Mars. Nestlé famously switched its Smarties candies from plastics to paper at the outset of 2021 as “one of our key sustainable packaging initiatives in the confectionery category.” Regional Australian trials of recyclable paper wraps (more on that here) are the latest for Nestlé’s KitKat candy bars. The company says it’s leaving no rock unturned in its quest to reduce plastic usage by a third by 2025. Nestlé says it’s using less of it, using recycled forms of it, and in this case, seeking alternatives to it.


Read article   Read an opinion column and conversation between sustainable packaging expert Bob Lilienfeld and PW editor Matt Reynolds on the several recent moves by large brand confectionery manufacturers from plastic flow-wrapping to paper-based flow-wrapping. 


Three European environmental groups, not content with mere anti-plastics rhetoric, are suing Danone under a French “Duty of Vigilance” law that requires large companies to address the environmental impact of their operations and allows them to be sued if they fail to do so. 

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