Princes Case Study - Packaging
01 January 2019
Recognising the need to increasingly reuse, repurpose and recycle materials, Princes started wotking with its supply partner Plastipak to introduce reycled PET (RPET) into its soft drinks business back in 2007.
Topics
Sectors
- Fruit & Vegetable Juices, Soft Drinks
Food and drink group Princes supplies over 900 million recyclable PET bottles each year within its leading brand ranges including Napoline, Crisp ‘n’ Dry, Jucee and Aqua Pura. Princes also manufacturers customer own brand soft drinks and oils in PET bottles for national retailers.
Princes has taken a significant step in the use of recycled plasti through a long-term partnership approach with its key supplier, enabling over 50% recycled PET to be used in all drinks and oils they produce – some 7% of the UK’s plastic bottles.
Recognising the need to increasingly reuse, repurpose and recycle materials, Princes started wotking with its supply partner Plastipak to introduce reycled PET (RPET) into its soft drinks business back in 2007.
Initial trials at high level inclusion rates were unsuccessful, resulting in discoloured bottles consumers would not accept, but a gradual process of improvement of the feedstock quality saw Princes use of RPET reach 25% in 2015 in all its soft drinks.
The next challenge was not only to move this figure up but source the material from UK recycled plastic. The long-term commitment to sourcing large quantities of RPET gave Princes supplier the commitment needed to make investment in UK recycling infrastructure. Additional investments made in 2017 saw larger quantities of UK material become available and Princes will have implemented 51% RPET in all of its soft drinks and oils – 922m bottles – by the end of 2018.
This move is part of Princes wider work on plastics and recycled content has increased in a number of areas as well as overall weight reduction. They will not commit further to targets but intend to attain fully recycled content for all plastics as soon as possible. Reycling technology and scalability is developing all the time and if local authority collections improve and Deposit Return Schemes are successfully introduced Princes hope there will be an improvement in the feedstock of plastics to the recycling industry.