Overview
Six questions about sustainable packaging
Consumers and brand owners have a great need for sustainable alternatives to existing packaging with a high environmental impact. Together with and together for producers of packaging, Wageningen Food & Biobased Research is developing new so-called renewable packaging materials with exactly the desired functional properties. We are also looking for alternatives to sustainable packaging for fresh and shelf-stable foods. After all, which packaging material ensures that products have a shelf-life, are safe and at the same time have good end-of-life options and are also affordable? The market is looking for answers on the following questions:
Questions & Answers
Dilemma 1: Fresh products such as strawberries look more environmentally friendly in cardboard trays than in plastic trays. But how can I be sure this is an environmentally friendly alternative and that the tray contains no harmful chemicals?
Dilemma 2: Which yields more sustainability gains: recyclable packaging that causes more food waste or non-recyclable packaging that causes less food waste?
Dilemma 3: The packaging I currently use is difficult to recycle: is it wiser to wait for a better recycling technology or should I redesign my packaging now?
Dilemma 4: Milk cartons contribute less to climate change than milk bottles, but cartons are still more difficult to recycle; what is the best choice at the moment?
Dilemma 5: How can I make my plastic packaging truly circular while there is hardly any food contact approved recycled plastic available?
Answer from an expert: This is indeed is a serious issue since currently there is a major shortage of high-grade recycled plastic because of:
1. the demand has risen faster than the recycling industry can build production capacity.
2. several large enterprises have secured strategic positions in this markets by purchasing large quantities
3. the European directive for recycled plastics used in food packaging is so strict that most plastics cannot comply with it. In fact no recycled plastic formally complies. State of the art is rPET, but even for this material only “positive opinions of the European Food Safety Agency (EFSA) that the combination of process and raw material is compliant” have been written. However, not one company has yet received formal approval from the European Commission. Therefore, the scarcity of food-grade recycled plastics is partly caused by the European legislators themselves and will have to be resolved by them in the first instance. In the meantime, packaging companies can continue to work on ‘design-for-recycling’ to limit the amount of contaminations in recycled plastics and so make the challenge for recycling companies to produce food-grade recycled plastic easier.
Dilemma 6: Supermarkets and consumers are forcing suppliers of fresh produce to stop packaging their products in plastic. How can they continue to guarantee shelf life and food safety?
Read more about the work of Wageningen Food & Biobased Research
- Go to our research programmes: Postharvest quality and Renewable materials