Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Monday, January 25 2021 - 19:00
AsiaNet
Tetra Pak Calls for Collaborative Innovation to Tackle Sustainability Challenges in the Food Packaging Industry
LAUSANNE, Switzerland, Jan. 25, 2021, /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/--

Tetra Pak has introduced a new collaborative innovation model with leading 
paperboard producers, a move aimed at tackling the food packaging industry's 
sustainability challenges. The traditional operating model of a linear supply 
chain has changed, and a new partnership ecosystem model is emerging 
[https://www.just-food.com/tetra-pak/article-one.aspx ], where the entire 
industry works in close collaboration. This brings together not only producers 
and suppliers, but also research institutions, universities and start-ups in an 
attempt to find solutions. 
 
According to the latest research 
[https://www.tetrapak.com/campaigns/go-nature-go-carton/challenges ] the global 
food supply chain system is responsible for 26% of global greenhouse gas 
emissions; a third of all food is lost or wasted somewhere in the supply chain; 
fossil fuel-based materials need to be phased out; and significant improvements 
are needed to the way packaging is dealt with after use. 

Laurence Mott, Executive VP for Development and Engineering at Tetra Pak, says: 
"We are joining forces with our strategic partners and paperboard producers to 
find solutions. It's possible to make a completely sustainable package, but you 
have to make it safe. And if you can't make it at scale, you can't minimise 
food waste, and you can't serve a growing global population. In order to bring 
those three things together, it takes very strong collaboration." 

Mott says that the scale of the environmental challenges the world faces 
requires that actors within the value chain join forces to develop truly 
sustainable packaging solutions. 

Leading paperboard producers are united in their approach to tackle carbon 
emissions and have an ambition to create a net-zero carbon future.

Hannu Kasurinen, Executive Vice President Packaging 
[https://app.frame.io/presentations/b64bc200-81e1-40c6-a50e-21f0a60db9c2 ] at 
Stora Enso [https://www.storaenso.com/en/ ], a leading global provider of 
renewable solutions, says: "We trust, we share, we learn together. Our best 
innovators collaborate, and we move forward and we innovate. Sometimes we fail, 
but then we learn from those failures. We have grown much closer to each other, 
because we have the same strategic objectives – which are good for the people 
and the planet." 

Francisco Razzolini, Industrial Technology, Innovation, Sustainability and 
Projects Director at Klabin, Brazil's largest paper producer 
[https://app.frame.io/presentations/b64bc200-81e1-40c6-a50e-21f0a60db9c2 ], 
says: "We are seeing new demands from society and from consumers to make 
products and processes that are more sustainable. Meeting these demands 
requires a lot of collaboration between our companies. By sharing experiences, 
thoughts, ideas and developments, we can speed up the innovation process."

Malin Ljung Eiborn, Head of Sustainability and Public Affairs 
[https://app.frame.io/presentations/b64bc200-81e1-40c6-a50e-21f0a60db9c2 ] at 
BillerudKorsnäs [https://www.billerudkorsnas.com/about-us ], a world leading 
provider of fibre-based packaging material, says: "The vision is 100% 
fibre-based and fully recyclable packaging, where plastic and aluminium are not 
needed anymore. We still have, of course, some steps to go before we are there 
from a technical perspective. But we work as one project team on this because 
the only way that we can solve them is to do this together."

The challenges the industry faces 
[https://www.tetrapak.com/campaigns/go-nature-go-carton/home ] include removing 
the thin layers of plastic and aluminium replacing them with plant or wood 
fibre-based materials, developing a renewable alternative to the plastic straw, 
and improving the recyclability of packages. When responsibly sourced, 
plant-based renewable materials can support towards protecting biodiversity and 
the natural ecosystem. This means the industry can minimise the need for 
fossil-based materials.

And it is these and other challenges on which Tetra Pak and its partners are 
teaming up within the new collaborative innovation model. Tetra Pak's aim is to 
create the world's most sustainable package 
[https://www.tetrapak.com/campaigns/go-nature-go-carton/our-journey ] – one 
that secures food safety and availability while reducing the impact on the 
planet.

Doodle illustrations 

Tetra Pak Innovation journey [https://files.symbal.com/_48G1Zv5EIYBNE ]

Innovating for sustainability 
[https://app.frame.io/presentations/11f4d407-20b3-4099-b4cf-245f9e338e01 ]

Video - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JO9iwd1Fr2c Video - 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kLb514KO8Rs Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424926/Tetra_Pak.jpg Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424927/Tetra_Pak.jpg Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424928/Tetra_Pak_Laurence_Mott.jpg Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424930/Tetra_Pak.jpg Photo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424931/Tetra_Pak_Lund.jpg Logo - 
https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1424920/Tetra_Pak_Logo.jpg
 

SOURCE: Tetra Pak
Translations

Japanese