1 / 18

Science & Innovation in Packaging

Science & Innovation in Packaging. Dick Searle Chief Executive The Packaging Federation. The “Inconvenient Truths” of Packaging. Packaging only exists because products exist First & foremost it’s a Delivery System for Products Its Primary Role is to contain, protect and preserve

Download Presentation

Science & Innovation in Packaging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Science & Innovation in Packaging Dick Searle Chief Executive The Packaging Federation

  2. The “Inconvenient Truths” of Packaging • Packaging only exists because products exist • First & foremost it’s a Delivery System for Products • Its Primary Role is to contain, protect and preserve • But it’s also a Primary Mechanism for Branding • It’s very visible but little understood by consumers • But its environmental impact is much, much less than that of the damage that would arise without it • And…Modern Society couldn’t function without it!!

  3. ‘So why is there so much Packaging?’ • Demand for Packaging is created solely by the demand for the products that it contains • Consumers expect to have everything available 24/7 – only possible with modern packaging • Political & Media focus on packaging seems to be driven by what consumers see in their bins • And yet it’s consumer demand only that puts it there – wonderful “disconnect”! • It’s an inevitable and necessary feature of modern living • And yet its existence is consistently attacked

  4. So What About The Future? • The World faces an unprecedented challenge to feed itself • Global warming is expected to substantially reduce the availability of land for growing food • Increased productivity and waste prevention at all stages will be absolutely key – and not just in developing countries • Modern packaging and distribution systems will play an inevitable and unavoidable role in this • Current supply chain losses of 40-50% in less developed countries are unacceptable (vs estimated <5% in the UK) • Packaging and the science and innovation that drives its development and existence is ready to meet the challenge

  5. The Role of Science & Innovation • Warmly welcome packaging being viewed on the basis of science – not politics and media myths • Could start by addressing contents of Food 2030 – only addresses packaging in the context of reducing it! • And “making more of our essential packaging recyclable” – so what about “meat packaging”?! • One plus from all the UK attention on packaging is that our industry leads the world in packaging innovation • Whilst science is important, its application in innovative products has been the huge driver in the last few decades • Enabled fundamental changes in product offerings and retail methodology

  6. Look Back to the Fifties…….. • Shopping was a daily exercise • Grocers shops (Liptons, Maypole, H&C) • Almost no supermarkets • Most products sold loose – queues/hygiene • Home deliveries of milk, bread…even ‘pop’ • Range was limited and fresh food seasonal • Convenience foods almost unheard of

  7. And Now in the “Teenies”… • Consumption has increased dramatically • Supermarkets are everywhere • Shopping is mostly a weekly excursion with intermediate “top-ups” • Range and choice are huge • Products available all year round • Convenience is ‘everything’ • And it’s this consumer demand for goods that drives demand for the packaging around it

  8. And so…. • Packaging is the ‘enabler’ for shopping as we know it today – supermarkets could not exist without it • Product wastage in the supply chain is now minimal • Product presentation and information are key • Brands are mostly defined by their Packaging • Many markets owe their existence to developments in packaging

  9. All of these developed since the 50’s • Lightweight one-trip glass bottles • Easy-open lightweight beverage and food cans • Plastic bottles and tubes • PET bottles • Flexible packaging sachets and pouches • Plastic films • Child resistant packaging • Liquid packaging cartons • Aseptic packaging

  10. And these!... • Ovenable packaging • Modified atmosphere packaging • Frozen food packaging • Microwaveable packaging • Chilled food packaging • Aerosols for toiletries & household products • Plastics pots for almost everything • Multiple packaging – board and plastics • Shelf ready packaging • Pharmacuetical & medical packaging

  11. Let’s just remind ourselves what “masters” packaging has to satisfy Demands of the product Demands of: Consumer Retailer Marketer Demands of: Production Distribution Storage Secondary packaging Primary packaging PRODUCT Demands of legislation and ‘environment’

  12. So what has the Packaging Industry done? • Developed a fantastic range of new products • Enabled a huge change in the way we shop • Facilitated the reduction in food waste in the supply chain to ca. 3% • Lightweighted packaging across the board • Achieved the decoupling of GDP growth from the increase in packaging used • Given consumers product protection, hygiene, convenience and pack information • Provided the platform for product branding and identification

  13. And some real facts about it • UK “consumption” is mid-table in EU • 3% of landfill and18% of household waste • Carbon footprint less than 2% - and way less than the damage it saves • Huge progress in recycling in last few years – over 60% now recycled – again mid-table in EU • Good recycling needs a better waste stream • Further progress requires ‘joined-up thinking’ • Energy from waste must be taken seriously

  14. Consumer Attitudes • Packaging responds to the needs of modern lifestyles and consumer demand – 24/7 • Consumer concern about the environment is real but is it well informed? • Are the messages right? – packaging vs global warming • Should all packaging be recyclable? • Do they understand that packaging is “only” the delivery system for the products that they demand? • Do consumers really want a return to the shopping regimes of yesteryear – lack of choice and even rationing • And what about what they say……as opposed to what they actually do! • And what about food waste in the home

  15. Consumer “Education”….and ours! • Knowledge of the real facts about packaging is very limited • “Recycling more important than reduced car use” • Whole supply chain (INCLUDING THE FOOD & DRINK INDUSTRY) needs to do much more….starting with their own employees! • Ambassadors for packaging – how much would you sell without it? • “Packaging in Perspective” • www.packagingfedn.co.uk/factsheets.html

  16. The Messages from Government • Totemic issues…..(e.g. plastic bags) • Consumers’ carbon “footprint” – 40%! • What are the real issues e.g. car use • Time for honesty and recognition of the absolute need for modern packaging if the world’s food challenges are to be overcome • Time for the “Appliance of Science” to actions on the realenvironmental challenges • For instance…..household food waste has at least 15 times more environmental impact than packaging waste

  17. And some “reminders” from us • Packaging is <3% of landfill • Global carbon footprint of packaging including disposal is >2% and it saves far more carbon by wastage reduction than it uses • And what would the footprint be without it! • There’s ten times more energy & materials in products than in the packaging around them • The energy content of one day’s packaging is equal to ONE MILE driven in the car !! • AVOIDABLE food waste in the bin has more than FIFTEEN times the impact of packaging waste

  18. And so….. In Conclusion • Modern demand needs modern packaging • Without it we’re back to the 50’s – with no supermarkets, restricted choice and vast increases in wastage • And the impact on the food and drink industry and its customers would be dramatic • At a time when the world faces dramatic challenges on the sustainability and development of its food supply, it needs the scientific and innovative skills of the packaging industry to succeed • So please let us get on with the job

More Related