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LÖFBERGS MOVES COFFEE PACKAGING TO RECYCLABLE MONO-MATERIAL

Löfbergs strive to be 100 % circular

Löfbergs strive to be 100 % circular

By 2030, Swedish based coffee group Löfbergs strive to be 100 % circular, which includes only using packages that are recyclable and made from renewable or recycled materials. Hence, Löfbergs works intensively to find and develop sustainable alternatives together with different partners. In one of the most recent projects, Löfbergs has reached revolutionary results – successful pilot tests of what likely are the world’s first high barrier soft plastic PE mono-material prototype for coffee.

The company says this is an important milestone representing a worldwide opportunity to close the loop as it enables used coffee packages to be sorted, recycled and regranulated with the possibilities to be reprocessed into new products.

This means that coffee packages waste can be used as a resource – Madelene Breiling, Supply Chain Development Manager at Löfbergs.

Up to now, most multilayer flexible plastic laminates and pouches on the market have not been suitable for collection, sorting or recycling. The challenge for the coffee industry particularly has been to find a thin solution in a mono polyethylene polymer, that is suitable to run on a high-speed machine, that has the barrier properties to protect the products and remain the long shelf life – so aromas and freshness of coffee remains, and that also can be widely sorted, collected and recycled on all markets.

We have been working on this ground-breaking innovation for a long time together with a material and machine supplier. Now we have developed a prototype with fully recyclable mono-PE material that is designed for the circular economy.

The prototype has passed all the rigorous quality tests so far and as the first small batch is approved, we plan to scale up tests to work on different material properties and fine-tuning of specifications, so that the new packages can hit the shelves later this year – Madelene Breiling, Supply Chain Development Manager at Löfbergs.

Reduce the overall carbon footprint


The new package is likely the first in the world to be entirely eco-designed. Made only from polyethylene, a fully recyclable material, it contains 0% aluminium.

Once sorted, collected, which will be possible everywhere where waste management and recycling systems are in place, it can be recycled and reused. And the recycled polymers can become granulates again to be used for new products. The next step is to run longer test runs and to continue to work on fine-tuning machines and material properties.

When everything runs smoothly the next step is to also make these mono-materials derive from a renewable source. We already see potential to increase the renewable share in these recyclable packages. The same transition that we have done on a majority of the packages we use, which has allowed us to reduce the overall carbon footprint for our packaging,- Madelene Breiling, Supply Chain Development Manager at Löfbergs.

Author

  • organisation:

    Nick Baskett is the editor in Chief at Bartalks. He holds a diploma from the Financial Times as a Non Executive Director and works as a consultant across multiple industries. Nick has owned multiple businesses, including an award-winning restaurant and coffee shop in North Macedonia.

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