Packaging’s impact on Climate Change

Companies need to adopt a more holistic approach when considering the link between packaging and carbon emissions. While it’s crucial to focus on reducing the carbon footprint of packaging materials themselves, such as by using recycled or biodegradable materials and optimizing packaging designs to minimize material usage, a comprehensive strategy must also address the broader carbon implications throughout the entire packaging lifecycle.

This means considering factors such as manufacturing processes, transportation, and end-of-life disposal methods. For example, manufacturing packaging materials often requires energy-intensive processes that contribute to carbon emissions. Companies can mitigate this by sourcing materials from suppliers with lower carbon footprints or investing in renewable energy sources for manufacturing facilities.

Additionally, the transportation of packaging materials and finished products adds to carbon emissions. Companies can reduce this impact by optimizing logistics, using more efficient transportation modes, and locating production facilities closer to suppliers and consumers.

Furthermore, companies must address the carbon impact of packaging waste disposal. Landfilling or incinerating packaging waste releases greenhouse gases into the atmosphere. Instead, companies should prioritize strategies such as recycling, composting, and designing packaging for reuse to minimize waste and carbon emissions.

Taking a holistic approach to packaging and carbon requires collaboration across the entire supply chain, from raw material suppliers to consumers. Companies can work with suppliers to improve transparency and traceability of materials, collaborate with logistics partners to optimize transportation routes, and engage with consumers to promote responsible consumption and waste reduction.

Through considering the full lifecycle carbon impact of packaging and implementing strategies to minimize emissions at each stage, companies can make meaningful contributions to mitigating climate change while also meeting consumer demand for sustainable products and packaging.

What’s contributing to climate change? Everyone can probably name a few of the culprits: how we get around; how we produce energy; and maybe what we eat. Less top of mind? The things we buy, including what they’re made out of and how they’re packaged.

For companies wanting to decarbonize, focusing solely on energy can stall efforts to tackle equally important sources of emissions. A 2019 report by Material Economics and the Ellen MacArthur Foundation (EMF) calculated that “materials” (defined as aluminum, plastic, cement, steel and food) account for 45 percent of global emissions. That means nearly half of our climate change problem requires an entirely different set of solutions from the ones currently getting most of the attention, such as electrification.

Despite the importance of this finding, it doesn’t seem to have worked its way into the sustainable packaging dialogue. We talk about recycling, the circular economy and other ways to use materials more effectively, but we don’t talk about why. We don’t talk about climate change.

EMF’s Global Commitment, for example, includes 6 of the 10 largest fast-moving consumer goods (FMCG) companies as signatories. Not a single one links their packaging goals to their climate goals. In fact, the 2023 progress report doesn’t include the phrase “climate change” at all. Although companies such as Nestle, PepsiCo and L’Oreal have made commitments to decrease virgin plastic use, increase post-consumer recycled content and move toward reuse models, these goals have been kept in isolation from those companies’ Science Based Targets, CDP reports and commitments toward net-zero emissions.

So what exactly is the connection? Let’s review two simple truths:

1. Packaging materials require resource extraction, which results in emissions

All materials used for packaging — fossil fuels, trees, bauxite ore, sand, sugar cane and more — must be extracted. Even recycled packaging requires collection, sorting and repulping or re-pelletizing. No matter their composition, all packaging materials carry a carbon cost, and every step of their processing results in emissions.

Thus the first equation to remember is: Materials = extraction = emissions

2. Packaging materials typically create waste, which results in emissions

Whether they’re burned, dumped or landfilled (the sites that actually produce 14 percent of U.S. methane emissions), disposed packaging materials create emissions. We’ve also largely ignored the opportunity to divert food out of landfills using packaging. Plus, poor packaging design — large pack sizes and no resealability — leads to more food waste and, you guessed it: more emissions. Yet few food companies are thinking about this as they work on their packaging.

The second equation to remember is: Materials = waste = emissions

 

No matter their composition, all packaging materials carry a carbon cost, and every step of their processing results in emissions.

It’s time to start doing the math on the above equations. We need to extract fewer resources and create less waste to reduce emissions. Less materials = less extraction and waste = lower emissions

How can companies making and using packaging start to think more holistically about packaging and carbon?

Integrate packaging goals (and progress) with climate goals
It all starts with folding your packaging goals into your climate goals. Setting a goal to use 20 percent recycled content in your packaging? Fold it under your goals to reduce your organization’s carbon footprint or get to net zero, and talk about both in one place on your website and sustainability reports. Ask your suppliers about their recycled content with the same questionnaires you’re using to ask about renewable energy portfolios. When it comes time to measure progress, calculate the avoided emissions from using recycled materials instead of virgin materials and count that as a win for your carbon goals. Do the same for your other packaging goals, such as phasing out single-use plastics or designing packaging to be recyclable or compostable.

Remember, materials = emissions. Any efforts you’re making with materials have direct, quantifiable climate implications, so show your work and track your progress.

Label your packaging with carbon information
If you or your organization are having trouble connecting the dots between packaging and climate change, just imagine how consumers feel. Brands haven’t done much to tell a simple story about how upstream manufacturing, packaging materials and disposal all contribute to a product’s carbon footprint. Instead, their stories have focused almost exclusively on recycling, so much so that most consumers see recycling as the best thing they can do for the environment. But if your packaging isn’t recyclable, you’re not giving your customers ways to understand what you’re doing to tackle climate change.

Enter: the carbon footprint label. Think of it as a nutrition label, but with information about a product’s emissions coming from production, transportation and use, instead of calories and carbs. According to the Carbon Trust, almost 60 percent of consumers would be more likely to trust that a product carrying a carbon footprint label is taking action to reduce its carbon footprint compared with a similar product that didn’t carry a label. Yes, calculating and communicating carbon isn’t easy. But it’s the only way to make the invisible visible. Smaller brands such as CocokindOatly and Quorn are showing the industry how this could work.

The disconnect between the climate change conversation and the packaging conversation has become too glaring to ignore. The Sustainable Packaging Coalition’s two main events this year, including SPC Advance this fall, are exploring the elephant in the room: the carbon-packaging connection. It’s time for the packaging industry (and other “materials” industries) to adopt the strategies being deployed to tackle climate change, such as goal setting, reporting, labeling and storytelling.

Global Biodiversity Information Facility

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