Striving for sustainability: Recyclability is only half the picture
Design for recycling has to be at the top of the agenda for every plastics processing company. To make packaging materials more recyclable without compromising product protection, we need packaging solutions whose development is coordinated with the customer with recyclability in mind right from the outset.
A single-source solution is the go-to approach here if reduced wall thicknesses are transparent or only subtly colored, while decorative elements such as sleeves can be easily separated from the packaging. This much is self-evident in the eyes of sustainability-minded people.
In terms of recyclability, this means material can be saved and packaging optimized so that it can be 100 percent recycled in conventional facilities. This aspect is all well and good. Yet as is so often the case in life, every coin has its flip side.
A choice between a recyclable product with reduced CO2 emissions and a nonrecyclable product with comparatively high CO2 emissions is simple. But the decision gets difficult when, instead, higher CO2 emissions would be released in exchange for greater recyclability. Will the product be recycled? Certainly. But at what price as far as CO2 is concerned?
Against this background, cardboard-plastic combinations provide an outstanding solution.