Edmonton Journal

Tetra Pak touts greener packaging

Time to move beyond recycling to ‘renewabili­ty,’ company says

- SHEILA PRATT spratt@edmontonjo­urnal.com

Those handy juice boxes stuffed into kids’ lunches could soon be made of plastic from plants or algae if a new environmen­tal campaign by global manufactur­er Tetra Pak Inc. gets traction.

Raising the alarm about the world’s looming shortage of metals and fuels, the Swissbased packaging giant is calling for a shift to “renewable” materials to put into its ubiquitous packages.

“When it comes to the world’s resources crunch, there is a need for better management,” said Elisabeth Comere, Tetra Pak director of environmen­t and government affairs for Canada and the U.S., based in Chicago.

“We need to operate within the planet’s boundaries.”

Packaging for prepared food and drinks has long been a concern of the environmen­tal movement because a lot of raw materials are used and quickly thrown away.

That’s why Tetra Pak stressed recycling of its packages for years and Canada is ahead of most countries on that front, said Comere.

Now it’s time to move past recycling to “renewabili­ty,” says the company’s white paper “Moving to the Front,” released last week in the U.S and this week in Canada.

And there are business opportunit­ies in this search for greener materials, Comere added.

For instance, this spring Tetra Pak’s Brazil operations began using a form of polymer plastic made from sugarcane in about 13 billion packets.

“Today is its bio-based plastic; tomorrow, it may be something else,” said Comere.

The packages are 75-percent paper board, 20-percent polymer and five-percent aluminum.

“We want to be vocal about our preference for renewable material,” said Comere, noting that the world’s demand for raw materials will double by 2050.

The report uses some strong language in its call for renewable materials that Tetra Pak says environmen­tally conscious consumers want.

“The truth is we are running dangerousl­y low on natural resources and playing a self-destructiv­e game with the limits of our planet. The time to change, innovate and lead is now,” says the report.

“We must establish a new industry commitment to renewabili­ty — protecting natural resources and rewarding best practices and innovation­s that focus on the front end.”

The company wants to recruit big beverage companies as well as environmen­tal groups to supports its push for renewabili­ty.

Tetra Pak already has a green certificat­ion standard to ensure their paper-board supply comes from “sustainabl­y managed” forests, Comere noted.

It wants the same kind of green certificat­ion to apply for manufactur­ers of the aluminum layer in every box that causes 44 per cent of the GHG from each box, she added. The metal is carboninte­nsive to produce.

 ?? EDMONTON JOURNAL ?? Tetra Pak is making its juice boxes and soup boxes more eco-friendly by using bio-plastics and algae.
EDMONTON JOURNAL Tetra Pak is making its juice boxes and soup boxes more eco-friendly by using bio-plastics and algae.

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