Metsä Board has designed a light but strong, easily recyclable packaging for the new Chopin Organic Rye Vodka range at its Excellence Center in Äänekoski, Finland.
In recent decades, packaging technologies continuously improve to combine optimum product protection with highly efficient processes. One factor has gained importance within the last few years: The environmental impact of packaging.
Sustainability is more than a trend; it’s a call to action, and one that consumers across the globe are becoming more involved in, pushing brands to set goals that help reduce climate change by 2030.
The 2020 Walpole Yearbook forecasts the future of British luxury, with essays from Esquire’s Alex Bilmes, The Economist’s Daniel Franklin, Lydia Slater of Harper’s Bazaar and other leading luxury commentators, as well as stories from 60 Walpole member brands.
Mondi has launched a paper EcoWicketBag for Drylock Technologies’ baby diaper ranges, bringing sustainable paper-based packaging to the hygiene market globally.
The new portfolio will have a PCR glass percentage of 20-25% (in accordance with the European Glass Container Federation) to ensure extreme brilliance.
World Design Organization (WDO) and World Packaging Organisation (WPO) have formalized a partnership to leverage their shared commitment for sustainability and education in order to organize and implement a variety of collaborative projects.
Typically not a market where sustainable packaging is regularly seen, cosmetics giant L'Oréal joins 60+ brands, retailers, government agencies and NGOs in collaboration to advance all plastic packaging in the U.S., to become reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2025.
The environmental problem of plastic pollution is a high concern among a surging eco-conscious global population who are striving to reduce plastic use. When used responsibly, plastic packaging plays a crucial role in mitigating an even more critical problem of food waste.