Tag: packaging

  • Is packaging necessary? Not for these shops

    Brooklyn resident Katerina Bogatireva had long carried reusable bags to the grocery store and rejected single-use plastic water bottles. But when her son, Sepand, was in kindergarten, she stepped up her game.

    After having a sustainability lesson in school, she says, “He was very concerned. And he said, ‘Mummy, do you know how long plastic will remain in the landfill?’ And that sort of broke my heart.”

    For Ms. Bogatireva, that moment spurred a lifestyle change that led to a business venture. Now, four years later, she owns a grocery store called Precycle, where shoppers can buy their fruits and vegetables, pastas and grains, flours and legumes, and oils and vinegars without the packaging that typically comes with them.

    Precycle isn’t the only packaging-free business cropping up in the United States in recent years. There’s also Zero market in Colorado, Fillgood.co in California, and Package Free Shop, also in Brooklyn. And large corporations are starting to take notice, too. Companies like Starbucks, Nestlé, Häagen-Dazs, Procter & Gamble, and others are taking steps to reduce their packaging waste.

    Starbucks has made plans to ditch plastic straws, Nestlé pledged to make its packaging entirely recyclable or reusable, and British grocer Iceland has promised to eliminate plastic packaging from its own brand products.

    This comes as part of a broader cultural shift in the popular environmental movement, from touting recycling to emphasizing efforts to reuse and reduce consumption of single-use items like bags, cutlery, and containers. And if this approach continues to catch on, that could say something about what people value.

    “Plastic is everywhere in our economy,” says Thomas Kinnaman, an environmental economist at Bucknell University in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. So if companies like Precycle take off, he says, it will signal that people really do want to find another way, despite the benefits plastic packaging can provide.

    One benefit of plastic packaging has been convenience. If grocery goods are already portioned out into lightweight packaging and plastic bags are on hand, the only things shoppers need to bring to the store are themselves and their wallets. Furthermore, such packaging has allowed for the development of convenience items like pre-made meals and individual snack bags for children’s lunches.

    Opting to avoid packaging entirely can be particularly inconvenient, says Ms. Bogatireva. When she decided to reduce her own contributions to landfills, she found that she had to cobble together her shopping trips, stopping at multiple stores and farmers markets to find the items she needed without the plastic. Precycle grew out of that hassle, officially opening its doors in December 2018 to make it easier for consumers to choose packaging-free options.

    Here’s how it works: Customers bring their own containers to Precycle, or buy reusable vessels sold there. When they enter the store, they have to weigh their empty containers, which they then weigh again at checkout to know how much to pay for. Despite the inconvenience of carrying containers to the store, people are buying into it, says Ms. Bogatireva.

    Precycle has a loyalty program and already about 1,200 people have signed up.

    Another benefit of packaging that has become integral to modern society is its ability to make something perishable last much longer, says Susan Selke, director of the School of Packaging at Michigan State University in East Lansing.

    “The advent of modern packaging is often tied to the change from crackers in a barrel at the store to prepackaged crackers that could sit on the shelf and stay fresh and crispy for a lot longer,” she says. “Could we conceivably go back to that cracker barrel-style economy? Maybe.

    But it would involve drastic societal changes.” That is a limitation for Precycle, says Ms. Bogatireva. As a result, the store primarily carries ingredients rather than ready-made foods. But even then, there are challenges. Ms. Bogatireva has no plans to stock meat or fish, but customers want cheese, so she has opted for wax- wrapped cheeses, and encourages customers to make candles from the wax.

    Not everyone is inclined to make these lifestyle choices, says Dr. Kinnaman. But those who do are often doing a sort of informal cost-benefit analysis weighing factors like the convenience and nonperishability against the guilt they may feel for filling up their trash cans and their understanding of the danger to the environment posed by that waste.

    Some things are beyond individual consumers’ actions, though. “My biggest challenge is to reduce waste as a business”, says Ms. Bogatireva. It’s tricky to find suppliers that use no single-use packaging whatsoever. For Precycle, she opts for suppliers who use recyclable packaging, like cardboard, when there isn’t a waste-free way to transport products.

    “The idea is to do what you can,” she says. “Every little bit counts.”

    This article is being published as part of Earth Beats, an international and collaborative
    initiative gathering 18 news media outlets from around the world to focus on solutions
    to waste and pollution.

  • Govt urged to examine packaging materials

    Govt urged to examine packaging materials

    A don, Dr. Ademola Adeyemo  has called on the government  to enforce the policy on the examination of packaging materials to avoid contamination.

    Adeyemo,who is Deputy Director, Directorate of General Administration, Agricultural and Rural Management Institute (ARMTI), said the migration of chemicals from packaging materials into food has highlighted a gap in the nation’s food safety regulation.

    He said authorities should focus  on the regulation on packaging, with particular attention to the migration of chemicals from packaging and food contact materials, adding that  there are possibilities of contaminated chemicals in plastics used in food and food packaging affecting  consumers.

    Adeyemo said there should be advice on how to use materials that are in contact with foods.

    Specifically, Adeyemo said the government  should  spelt out standards  on new packaging and recycled ones, adding that companies should step up technologies that they are using and demonstrate their  readiness to ensure  safe of production process.

    He said regulatory agencies  should explore avenues to address the issue, ranging from the provisions that are in place under the food standards code, to regulatory, co-regulatory and self-regulatory options.

    According to him, the firms  should demonstrate to consumers that they can be trusted.

  • Chivita Active gets new packaging

    Chivita Active, a refreshing and nourishing fruit juice from the stable of Chi Limited, now wears a new look following a strategic makeover to reposition and convey tangible and intangible attributes of the brand to the consumer.

    According to the Managing Director of Chi Limited, Mr. Deepanjan Roy, the new pack is a fresh and entirely new design aimed at effectively communicating the core value of Chivita Active as an “active healthy lifestyle” brand to consumers.

    He added that the new pack parades a bold new logo that is refreshingly modern while exuding the core essence of active health. “With rounded contemporary edges and the forward pointing red triangle, the logo emphasises on advancement, achievement and success,” he said.

    Roy continued: “The design is cutting edge. The rich fruit and juice visuals combine perfectly with the simplistic design and colour pallet to reveal a truly sophisticated pack. It is a pack that exudes confidence and fitness and will resonate with those who lead an active lifestyle and are primed to achieve more.”

    The pack also features a nutritional information panel on the six citrus fruits mixed together to form the juice while “Fortified with Vitamin C” is strategically positioned on the pack to further identify with the health conscious consumer. Further examination of the pack reveals active images on the side panels that urge consumers to embrace the active lifestyle and an inviting motif of fruits and juice splash.

    Chivita Active fruit juice contains six citric fruit juices and added vitamin C. The citric fruit juices are Orange, Grapefruit, Lime, Tangerine, Lemon and Mandarine.

  • More jobs as pelting takes packaging to new height

    More jobs as pelting takes packaging to new height

    Many companies are breaking away from the traditional world of packaging products. They have embraced a concept known as pelting, which experts say, is a veritable means of creating jobs, AKINOLA AJIBADE writes.

     

    It is no longer fashionable to package products the way companies used to do. Many firms had broken away from tradition to adopt the modern means of packaging known as pelting. Pelting? Yes, it is the process of converting skin, fur and other related raw materials into useful packaging items like sachets, aluminum foils, tetra paks, among others.

    The concept has redefined the manner in which Fast Moving Consumable Goods (FCMG) are packaged.

    Pelting enable companies to produce goods in convenient, light, flexible and disposable packs. In the United States (US) and Europe, firms are offering some of their products in sachets, aluminum foils and other forms of packages.

    They may have adopted this approach because it is cost effective to produce such packs, compared to bottles, among other traditional means of packaging.

    Nigeria has joined the train. Many companies are redesigning the packs in which they offer their products.

    Among them are Friesland Campina, Promasidor Nigeria, Nestle Nigeria, Cadbury Nigeria, Glaxo Smith Beecham, Nigerian Breweries, Unilever Nigeria, Chivita Nigeria Limited, Dangote, Fumman Nigeria Limited, Nigerian Bottling Company, and pharmaceutical firms.

    According to experts, pelting has widened job prospects for graphic artists, printers, suppliers, quality control and laboratory officers, drivers, technicians and factory workers. They said a paradigm shift is occurring in the packaging industry, adding that people that are technologically driven would get jobs.

    A Quality Control Officer at Alufoils Nigeria Limited, Mr Michael John, said pelting is the in-thing globally, adding that the concept has the potential to create jobs. Alufiols produces packages for companies. John said conglomerates are sparring no efforts in offering their products in sachets and tetra paks, adding that the development is creating jobs for people who have expertise in those areas.

    He said packaging firms are adding tetra paks and sachets to their lines of production to foster growth. This, he said, is creating jobs for some people. He said more people would get jobs because companies are looking for a cost effective and flexible ways of offering their products to consumers. This, he added, is evident by their decision to import or source materials locally to produce such packs.

    He said: “Three different job opportunities are opening up in the nation’s packaging industry. First are the manufacturing companies that are adopting pelting as the new packaging concepts, and further employ people who can fit into the system. Secondly, are the packaging firms that are buying new machines to produce sachets, among other packs. Thirdly, are people who supply materials to packaging outfits. This shows that there are lots of job prospects in the packaging industry. Besides, new packaging firms are springing up in the country.

    “A packaging firm employs an average of 500 people depending on its size, adding that many of such companies would be established to meet the needs, as they arise. We have fewer number of packaging companies in the country. With time, hundreds of such companies would be established, once the economy improves. Though it is difficult to mention the number of people that would be employed in the packaging industry, thousands would get jobs because the demand for packaging items, such as sachets, aluminum foils and tetra paks is huge.”

    He said the nation’s aluminum industry has cut its production due to certain problems, arguing that the development has affected companies that produce crown corks, and cans for breweries and soft drinks companies.

    “The losses in one sector are gains in another. What is happening in the aluminum industry is a plus for the packaging companies, that now increase their production. This has brought a corresponding increase in the number of people needed to produce packs for manufacturers, “he added.

    He said pelting has opened up opportunities for unemployed, advising them to use it well.

    The former secretary, Association of Food, Beverage and Tobacco Employers, Mr Aderemi Adegboyega, said there are different layers of jobs in the manufacturing and allied fields. He said there is no area of the sector that does not have its own job potential. He advised the government to help in fostering economic growth. He said every aspect of production can be improved by employing more hands. He said companies’ decision to develop new packages has not only boosted their operations, it has provided opportunities for people to get jobs.

    According to him, many people would be employed as companies continue to fashion out new methods of packaging their products. He said at the heart of packaging is creative, adding that people that are highly creative would get jobs. He said as companies produce sachets and tetra paks for their products, more people are coming into employment nets.

    A former production manager, Vono Nigeria Plc, Mr Segun Babayanju, said technology has simplified the processes of producing packages for consumable goods. Babayeju said ‘pelting’ has helped in creating millions of jobs in Europe, arguing that it would take some time before Nigeria optimises the opportunities in it.

    “Considering the size of the economy, a company that adopts ‘pelting’ as a concept should be able to create seasonal and non-seasonal jobs for people. Seasonal jobs have to do with employment. For instance, let’s say we have 6,000 companies producing consumable goods in the country, each of them is expected to employ more workers to make the idea works. I know the companies are more than that. Even at that, over 100,000 jobs would be created in the future if the companies are serious enough, “ he said. He added that conglomerates like Nestle Nigeria, Cadbury Nigeria and Unilever Nigeria know what it takes to offer their products in sachets, adding that they employ competent people to handle such issues.

    Babayanju said government’s roles are critical to the success of the real sector, advising it to provide an environment that is suitable for economic growth.