PPWR: glass bottle makers “disappointed” with approach

FEVE, the association of European manufacturers of glass containers, has said it is disappointed with the the Council of the EU’s position on the Packaging & Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR).

In a statement, the association said that “unlike the European Parliament, the Council of the EU has failed to recognise the contribution that circular packaging can make to competitiveness and sustainable growth in in their position on the Packaging & Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR)”.

FEVE is the association of European manufacturers of glass containers. The glass packaging industry generates 125 000 direct and indirect jobs thanks to 160 Container glass production sites in Europe producing a wide range of glass packaging products for food and beverages, perfumery, cosmetics and pharmacy for European and global customers. FEVE members have plants in 23 European countries.

In a statement releases today, they said the European container glass industry urges co-legislators to address waste reduction targets fairly, protect distinctive packaging designs, and be more ambitious on recyclability & separate collection during the upcoming trilogue (inter-institutional) negotiations.

“We are deeply concerned that, although Member States acknowledged the risk of material substitution, the overall packaging waste reduction targets based only on weight will inadvertently encourage a shift from circular materials like glass to lighter but less recyclable or reusable materials,” said Adeline Farrelly, Secretary General of FEVE.

PROTECT DISTINCTIVE PACKAGING DESIGNS

Despite last minute attempts to better protect proprietary designs, the industry remains worried that distinctive packaging designs are under threat as Member States failed to fully recognise design as an essential aspect of packaging and the importance of adequately respecting Intellectual Property Rights arising from unique designs.

“On top of its health and environmental benefits, the characteristics of glass in terms of design, transparency, shapes, colours and versatility often make glass an integral part of a product”, added Adeline Farrelly, Secretary General of FEVE. 

“So restricting packaging design disproportionately means that all products will look similar. Brands will lose one of the most important tools to convey their identity to consumers, and to stand out on the shelves.”

Member States have diluted the recyclability measures. “Not all recycling has the same environmental value,” said Adeline Farrelly. 

“The introduction of recyclability performance grades rewarding packaging that can be recycled multiple times and that can feed into a closed material loop would have been a major milestone. We regret that Member States missed the chance to incentivise packaging that is infinitely recyclable and which can remain productive in a Circular economy over and over again.”

The industry supports a mandatory separate collection target of packaging waste for all materials and regrets that Member States decided to limit this to a small proportion of packaging formats in scope of the mandatory Deposit Return Schemes (DRS). 

“Mandatory separate collection targets for all packaging materials will reduce waste much more effectively.  It will also ease the burden on taxpayers and a country’s waste management costs” added Adeline Farrelly.

ARTICLES

Barrel shortage grows in USA

American bourbon and whiskey distillers are facing a barrel shortage, with many seeing either a lack of availability or a lengthy wait for orders to

Green crab whiskey

A US New Hampshire craft distillery, famed for doing things a bit differently, is using invasive green crabs to flavour its latest creation, reports AP

Gordon Ramsay launches gin

TV chef, reality show star, and former face of Gordon’s Gin is launching his own gin in collaboration with Scotland’s Eden Mill St Andrews distillery

EPISODES