Consumers are looking to adopt sustainable habits into their day-to-day lives.
And in that ever-evolving push towards everyday sustainability, the concept of a
circular economy
— where materials are continually reused and repurposed, extending their
lifespan for as long as they remain useful — has gained significant traction.
From sustainable
fashion
to reusable
packaging
and glass bottle return and recycling programs, many companies have found
circular solutions that customers have shown they are willing to adopt. But
often, somewhere through the cycle, the circle is broken.
Consumers’ intention-action gap
There’s real evidence that consumers want to see a shift towards a sustainable
and circular economy. The barrier is not one of will; yet, there remains a gap
between consumers’ intentions and their actions.
Economic models shift slowly, and consumer habits are hard to break. Despite
their best intentions, consumers tend to do what is most convenient. In 2022,
ING conducted a
study
— Learning from consumers: How shifting demands are shaping companies’ circular
economy transition — that showed people are willing to make sustainable buying
decisions but are more likely to do so when minimal effort is required.
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In most cases, consumers are even willing to pay more for sustainable choices.
In a 2023 global McKinsey
survey,
4 to 7 percent of consumers expressed a willingness to pay over 10 percent more
for sustainable packaging. This is where businesses come in.
While the term ‘circular economy’ is becoming more commonplace, you’re much less
likely to hear people referring to its counterpart — the linear economy, which
has been the default for hundreds of years. There’s a reason why the linear
economy is sometimes referred to as a take-waste-make-waste model: It’s
convenient, and it makes it incredibly easy for consumers to consume.
Participating in a circular economy requires effort. It first takes a conscious
breaking of habits, then additional extra steps toward sustainability — sorting
recycling, understanding the lifecycles of goods, etc. If one model is easy and
the other is hard, which do you think people will choose?
How businesses can help bridge the gap
Image credit: Sustana
As we’ve seen, shifting people’s habits requires more than just buy-in. It also
requires ease and accessibility.
This is why businesses need to play a role in providing convenient solutions.
Doing so reduces the amount of necessary behavior change. Instead, businesses
can enable consumers to make choices that are better for the planet, by default.
A 2023
survey
by Two Sides North America shows that most consumers prefer paper-based
packaging for its environmental benefits — prompting brands to reevaluate their
packaging strategies.
When it comes to embracing circularity, paper is a pioneer. Paper products are
inherently renewable, recyclable and biodegradable. People are already used to
recycling paper, which removes a barrier and promotes material reuse. When used
for packaging, paper fits seamlessly into a circular economy: easily collected
and recycled, ensuring its valuable fibers are used again and again.
We already see this happening in the tech space: Google, for instance, is
working to improve its plastic
footprint
by working with vendors and suppliers to phase out products with single-use
plastics and using materials that are recyclable or compostable. Amazon,
meanwhile, has replaced 95 percent of its plastic air
packaging
with fully recyclable paper filler and is on track to remove its plastic
packaging in North America altogether.
From coffee cups to food containers, paper is now a go-to material across many
different retail and manufacturing fields. Indeed, the number-one trend
identified by the Sustainable Packaging Coalition in its 2024 sustainable
packaging trends report is "the paperization of
everything;"
demand for paper packaging is increasing at a rate of 3.5 percent per year.
Paper's circular utility
Consumers are drawn to paper packaging for several reasons. It’s naturally
recyclable, so it doesn't always require virgin tree material. Paper from the
"urban
forest"—
consisting of sorted office paper, cups, cartons and other fiber-based materials
recovered from recycling bins and processed at facilities across North America —
can be repurposed to create new paper products.
For packaging, paper is also visually appealing and premium-feeling due to its
texture and print quality; it’s malleable for artistic designs and is associated
with sustainability.
L’Oréal USA’s Seed Phytonutrients brand, for example, demonstrates the
potential of paper
packaging.
For its skin and hair products, the company has created a visually appealing
paper-based bottle made from recycled materials that's not only recyclable but
also shower-proof — a great example of how brands can use creative, practical
design to meet consumer demand for circular products.
For food packaging, having access to safe options is top-of-mind for consumers.
As people become more aware of the harms of
microplastics
and other byproducts of non-sustainable packaging, they are searching for
alternatives. In the earlier cited McKinsey
study,
respondents named hygiene, food safety and shelf life as the most important
product packaging characteristics when making a purchase.
Companies such as Sustana® address these needs by using sustainable,
recycled fiber for
food packaging that is compliant with FDA standards for use in direct food
contact packaging without the need of a barrier of any type.
Despite growing public familiarity with the concept, there’s still effort
required by companies to reduce friction and make circularity the standard.
According to a report by the European Environment
Agency,
achieving circularity requires a shift in pricing, standards and supply. The
emphasis for waste management should be on switching to high-quality, recyclable
materials. Among the eight secondary raw material markets assessed in the
report, three are classified as well-functioning:
aluminum,
glass
and paper.
Sustana keeps all of these considerations in mind. Our mission is to develop
sustainable solutions with clean materials and a circular mindset — making
sustainability an ingredient in everyday products.
A shift from linearity to circularity won’t happen overnight, but there are
tangible steps that businesses can take to help consumers shift their behaviors
today. It’s not all or nothing — impactful changes can come all along the way.
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Published Aug 27, 2024 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST