No More Plastic Stunts! Choose Real Sustainable Packaging!
Corona, the Anheuser-Busch InBev beer brand, recently built a "trash wall" on Ipanema Beach made from plastic collected on the famous Brazilian beach in just three days. The stunt followed the "wave of waste" sculpture that the same brand also made, again from plastic rubbish, and a host of similar awareness-raising initiatives by others, including a 50-foot-long plastic-waste sculpture of a dead whale, courtesy of Greenpeace Philippines.
Now you might
think brands that are building installations out of plastic waste are doing a
brilliant thing to highlight, and therefore reduce, the damage that excessive
use of plastic packaging and lack of recycling does to the environment. But if
you do, you’d be wrong.
As a creative
idea, it’s arguably becoming – much like those "float it up the
Thames" or "fire it into space" ideas that went before it – a
hackneyed and obvious PR stunt. Far worse, though, it’s a way of distracting
consumers from the manufacturers and corporates that are actually responsible
for the amount of plastic in the supply chain.
Then, when China
shut down recycling of foreign plastic waste last year, leaving the world with
no scalable means of recycling the mountains of plastic that we discard, the
already high stakes got even higher. Hectoring people to put the right waste in
the right recycling bins now looks like a futile effort compared with the waste
that is produced on an industrial scale.
Source from: Campaignlive (Malcolm Poynton April 12,
2019)
Is PCR
(Post-Consumer Recycled) Materials Safe?
Some brands are considering the PCR (Post-Consumer
Recycled) material for food contact packaging. However,
is recycled plastic safe for food packaging? There’s still a risk for using PCR
materials.
BPS never uses PCR materials for food grade packaging
considering the food safety and the weakened functionality and property of materials.
The risk of toxic substances contaminating food
already exists with virgin plastic, so it will only be higher with recycled
packaging coming from old plastics that may contain banned chemicals, says
Floriana Cimmarusti.
Recycled Plastics in Food Packaging
There is an
emphasis throughout the United States on increasing the uses of post-consumer
recycled (PCR) materials, including plastic. FDA is involved when industry
collects used polymeric materials (usually food containers) and proposes to
recycle these materials to make new food containers. FDA's main safety concerns
with the use of PCR plastic materials in food-contact articles are:
1) that
contaminants from the PCR material may appear in the final food-contact product
made from the recycled material,
2) that PCR
material may not be regulated for food-contact use may be incorporated into
food-contact article, and
3) that adjuvants
in the PCR plastic may not comply with the regulations for food-contact use.
To address these
concerns, FDA considers each proposed use of recycled plastic on a case-by-case
basis and issues informal advice as to whether the recycling process is
expected to produce PCR plastic of suitable purity for food-contact
applications. FDA has prepared a document entitled Guidance for Industry - Use
of Recycled Plastics in Food Packaging: Chemistry Considerations that will
assist manufacturers of food packaging in evaluating processes for PCR plastic
into food packaging.
Mrs & Mr
Manufacturer, no more plastic stunts. Just make the change and ditch plastics
from your supply chain for good.
Source from: www.fda.gov
Click
the below link and connect with BPS that Offers a variety of sustainable
packaging solutions:
Blog Editor: Nicola Wu
Contact BPS Team: inquiry@bestpackagesolutions.net
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