The Plight of Plastics in fresh produce – Produce Blue Book

Posted: March 4, 2020 at 6:44 pm

TAMPA, FLThink of what plastic packaging has done for entire categories. From seedless cucumbers to grapes, and especially berries.

Fresh-cut fruit wouldnt exist without plastic packaging.

Plastic packaging serves many functions grouping, protection, and shelf life extension, said Natalie Shuman, director of trade and retail marketing for Apeel Sciences, Galena, CA. There reality is that we cant eliminate all packaging, but there are areas where we can reduce reliance.

Before joining Apeel, a company working to reduce food waste through shelf life extension technology, Shuman helped to introduce the stand up pouch bag to the grape category under the Sun World brand.

When we launched that bag that is now ubiquitous across the produce department, we were thrilled because of what it did for merchandising and sales, she said. But I didnt think we were thinking, at the time, about what it was doing to contribute to this issue of plastic waste.

Shuman participated in a panel discussion of The Plight of Plastic at the Southeast Produce Councils Southern Exposure conference on Feb. 28.

Over the past few decades, single-use plastic packaging has increased tremendously, said Anabella de Freeman senior manager of sustainability for produce for Walmart Inc., Bentonville, AR. Packaged produce now accounts for more than 50% of produce sales at retail, she said.

And whats more, she said, millennial consumers prefer packaged produce.

Walmart has issued guidelines for the supplier community to meet, including reducing plastic and recycling metrics, but it can be difficult.

Why?

What we think of as recyclable often isnt. The numbered guide on many plastic packages (think, No. 1 through No. 7) denotes the type of plastic, not that facilities exist to recycle it.

Everybody thinks that clamshells are recycled, said Janis McIntosh, director of marketing innovation and sustainability for Naturipe Farms, Salinas, CA. Its called wishcycling. Ive been there. They take it right out and stick it in the landfill.

Most municipal recyclers dont take clamshells because they cant handle paper labels. Paper labels turn to a mush that contaminates the caustic bath used to wash the plastic to prepare it to be sold to plastic manufacturers.

Rigid plastic packaging is an essential component of the berry business, McIntosh said, so the industry is collaborating on efforts to make clamshells recycle-ready with a film label that separates from the plastic.

The panel outlined other types of collaboration the industry can take to minimize the environmental impact, and waste, of plastic packaging.

Brands have to drive demand for the solutions, said Elizabeth Yerecic key account manager for Yerecic Label.

As suppliers we cant do anything to push that without the demand from the brand owners, she says.

Panelists also discussed solutions like top-seal plastic and fiber-based containers, combined with a shelf-life extension like Apeel to reduce reliance on plastic packaging.

The biggest roadblock?

Price. It always comes down to price, McIntosh said.

Film labels cost anywhere from 15% to 40% more than paper labels, and the industry also is looking at challenges due to humidity and temperature that may affect the adhesives shelf life.

When asked what how the market will adapt to the higher cost of these packaging solutions, De Freeman the industry has to work together to mitigate cost.

The easy answer is that nobody wants to pay more for anything else, she said. Thats why we need to come together to really collaborate to find solutions that maybe at first have a cost impact, and investment. We can get a return on that investment by lowering the shrink.

Yerecic Label debuted the following video about the challenge of recycling plastic clamshells at Southern Exposure.

Continued here:
The Plight of Plastics in fresh produce - Produce Blue Book

Related Posts

Comments are closed.

Archives