New Study Shows that Paper Packaging is Better than Plastic

 
The IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute has concluded a new comparative study on the environmental affects as well as the general useful performance of different packaging solutions. The study focuses in part on the lifecycles of plastic products versus corresponding durable paper products from BillerudKorsnäs. Results cited also show that this paper based solution would have considerably more favorable environmental qualities than plastic, such as a 50-70% lowering of greenhouse gas emissions.

IVL's study looked at the entire product lifecycle, from material production up until packaging is either thrown away or recycled. Only the transportation and packaging production of plastic products currently emits less greenhouse gas, while the results show that the overall product lifecycle of paper products give rise to far less emissions overall. Material production of both paper and plastic packaging is the most energy intense part of production. But according to the study, which has been verified by Bureau Veritas, plastic production emits far more greenhouse gas in production than paper.

"The results of the study challenge a common misconception that the production of paper packaging is more energy consuming and environmentally detrimental than the production of plastic packaging. An important reason why the production of the tested BillerudKorsnäs packaging materials emits less greenhouse gas is that their process is almost entirely run on renewable energy. Another reason is that the total energy consumption for production of these products is lower", said Lena Dahlgren, project manager, IVL.

The EU parliament has recently introduced measures that will limit the use of plastic bags in Europe. The aim is to decrease their use from 200 plastic bags per person and year to 90 plastic bags per person and year before the end of 2019. Each member country will be free to decide how this goal will be achieved, but a possible solution might be to increase the use of paper bags.

"BillerudKorsnäs welcomes the EU initiative to deal with Europe's littering problems. Paper and board packaging are not the only solutions. It is important to reduce littering, regardless of material. But given a choice between plastic and paper, we believe that our products can contribute to solutions against both plastic littering as well as climate change, two of our times largest sustainability challenges", said SVP of Communication and Sustainability Henrik Essén, BillerudKorsnäs.

TAPPI
http://www.tappi.org/