• Paper-based food packaging. (Image: Unsplash; Agenlaku Indonesia)
    Paper-based food packaging. (Image: Unsplash; Agenlaku Indonesia)
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As the EU looks to adopt the Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), a new in-depth study, merging data from various sources, finds that imposing strict reusable packaging targets by 2030 will severely impact the EU’s climate footprint, as well as consumers’ budgets.

The new research reviewed several existing studies on packaging and drew on two separate model scenarios, one for food takeaway in Belgium and one for e-commerce packaging in Germany. These cases were selected to compare the impacts of paper-based packaging as used today, with those of reusable plastic packaging, if 2030 reuse targets foreseen in the PPWR were applied. The resulting study offers an analysis of environmental impacts, economic effects, and societal implications.

The study concluded that reusable solutions would yield higher CO2 emissions than paper and board – up to 160 per cent more carbon dioxide released into the atmosphere for food takeaway and up to 40 per cent for e-commerce, as per the findings of a McKinsey article, one of the sources of the research.

More paper packaging would actually drive up CO2 emissions. Photo credit Bethany Newman
 The study concluded that reusable solutions would yield higher CO2 emissions than paper and board.  Photo credit Bethany Newman

Paper and board have become a mainstream form of sustainable and recyclable packaging. This is thanks to the combined effects of decades of investment in recycling, design for circularity and, more recently, to legislation on plastic pollution. Because of the investments that would be necessary to develop a wholly new packaging model, and of its high operating costs, more reusable packaging would imply higher costs overall. These costs, the report found, would be mostly passed on to consumers.

The study foresees that it would be mainly transport that would be the driver for both CO2 emissions and costs. Reusable packaging needs to be transported back to the producer after delivery or purchase. This is not the case for recycling, which takes place nearer to the consumer, not the original production place.

Still, the report’s assumptions for reusable plastic packaging represent a best-case scenario, assuming for example that plastic recycling will experience a rapid development in the future or that plastic packaging will be reused many more times than is currently the case.

Jori Ringman, director general Cepi, Confederation of European Paper Industries said: “Done right, reuse and recycling could be complementary solutions to achieving higher circularity. What EU legislation currently says is that a decision to go for one solution or the other should be based on justified reasons of, inter alia, technical feasibility, economic viability and environmental protection. This cannot be decided by an EU-wide blanket decision as proposed by the European Commission, but has to be done case-by-case, while preference should be given to options that deliver the best overall environmental outcome.”

“With this new report, we are bringing forth an overview of what the science says about reusable, fossil- based packaging and recyclable, fibre-based one, and their respective impacts on climate and the environment in two well-researched cases. The results illustrate that sweeping reusable packaging targets simply do not comply with an approach based on proof of environmental benefit.”

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