Nature Valley’s store-drop-off recyclable snack bar wrapper open to industry adoption
Image credit: Nature Valley
Nature Valley™’s Crunchy granola bars can now be consumed guilt-free: The
company has launched the first plastic film wrapper designated as Store-Drop-Off
recyclable by How2Recycle® — a standardized labeling system that clearly
communicates recycling instructions right on the package. The new packaging bars
will be on shelves this spring and bring Nature Valley closer to achieving its
commitment to 100 percent recyclable packaging by 2025.
Nature Valley has purposefully not patented the wrapper — making it available
for other food brands to apply the technology to their product portfolios. And
to help encourage Store-Drop-Off recycling the wrappers and other eligible
plastics, the brand has created a multi-channel consumer-education plan to drive
awareness of Store-Drop-Off recycling and promote small consumer actions that
can lead to big impacts.
“This advancement led by Nature Valley demonstrates that big, innovative
thinking can empower and enable consumers to take small steps — like recycling a
wrapper through Store-Drop-Off — to make a significant difference in the health
of our planet,” said Mary Jane Melendez, chief sustainability and social
impact officer at Nature Valley parent company General Mills. “It’s up to
brands like Nature Valley and others in the snack industry to make these changes
and do our part to protect the environment for generations to come.”
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With this new packaging, Nature Valley plans to educate consumers about the
Store-Drop-Off recycling system, re-engage their interest in reducing landfilled
material and stimulate recycling. According to the Hartman Group’s
Sustainability 2019 report, 70 percent of US consumers want to decrease
plastic waste but don’t know how, yet over 90 percent are within 10
miles of a Store-Drop-Off recycling location. That is a potential 295 million
people who could participate in Store-Drop-Off recycling.
Nature Valley introduced the world’s first granola bar in 1975 as an on-the-go
snack designed to help people get outside and explore nature. Alongside
advancements from companies such as Nestlé — which in 2019 released the
industry’s first recyclable paper confectionery
packaging
— and recycling solutions from
TerraCycle,
solutions such as Nature Valley’s at scale could put a significant dent in the
waste from conventional snack bar packaging.
“Our drive to be a force for good, and a force for nature, led Nature Valley to
invest in this packaging technology,” said Brian Higgins, Grain Snacks Business
Unit Director at General Mills. “And as the creator and share leader of the bar
category, we feel a responsibility to continue innovating and encouraging future
solutions that could make recycling wrappers even easier.”
Nature Valley's new wrapper uses advanced film processing with
unique polyethylene polymers that protect product freshness and don’t compromise
shelf life. Once recycled, the materials can be used to create new products such
as synthetic lumber and decking equipment. The goal is to implement the wrapper
technology across the brand’s entire portfolio of snacks by 2025 and extend to
other General Mills brands and products.
Nature Valley and other General Mills brands are working with leading NGOs to
create infrastructure for plastic film recycling, such as The Recycling
Partnership and the Wrap Recycling
Action
Program (W.R.A.P.).
For more information, visit NatureValley.com/Recycle4Nature.
Winners of Closed Loop Partners’ Beyond the Bag Challenge are reinventing the plastic bag
Image credit: PlasticFri/Facebook
Meanwhile, the Center for the Circular Economy at Closed Loop Partners
has announced the nine
winners of its
inaugural Beyond the Bag
Challenge.
The winning solutions fall into three categories: Reuse and Refill;
Enabling Technology; and Innovative Materials — and range from reusable
packaging systems, to technology that incentivizes consumers to make sustainable
choices, to bags derived from next-generation materials.
The US alone uses an estimated 100 billion plastic bags per year, and less than
10 percent are recycled; single-use plastic bags continue to be one of the top
10 items found along beaches and waterways, according to the Ocean
Conservancy’s International Coastal Cleanup. The global threats brought
about by climate change and the pandemic have only underscored the urgency of
addressing our current system.
“There is no one-size-fits-all solution to tackle a problem as complex as our
reliance on single- use plastic bags,” says Kate Daly, Managing Director of
the Center for the Circular Economy at Closed Loop Partners. “The diversity of
our winners underscores how businesses and consumers alike need to employ a
range of solutions to fit different geographic, social and economic contexts.
We’re thrilled to announce these companies entering the next phase of the
initiative, as we continue to support their growth and begin to implement select
pilot programs.”
The Consortium to Reinvent the Retail
Bag is a
pre-competitive collaboration committed to reimagining the retail bag and
creating a more circular delivery system. Launched in July 2020, the
Consortium’s Beyond the Bag Initiative is an ambitious, three-year undertaking
that aims to identify and scale innovative alternatives to the single-use
plastic retail bag. Since its launch, Consortium founding partners CVS
Health,
Target and Walmart committed $15 million collectively to the collaboration — additional retail partners
DICK’S Sporting Goods, Dollar General, The Kroger Co, The TJX
Companies, Inc, Ahold Delhaize USA Brands, Albertsons Companies,
Hy-Vee, Meijer, Wakefern Food Corp and Walgreens have since
signed on.
“It is exciting to see the potential of our efforts to reimagine the single-use
bag in action as we unveil these innovative solutions,” says Eileen Howard
Boone, SVP of Corporate Social Responsibility and Philanthropy at CVS Health.
“We look forward to exploring opportunities to pilot these solutions at CVS
Pharmacy locations.”
The winners, according to category, are:
-
Reuse and refill:
-
ChicoBag — offering a new service that enables customers to borrow
bags on-site
-
Goatote — kiosk system that allows shoppers to access clean,
reusable bags anywhere a kiosk is found
-
Returnity — reusable shipping bags and boxes for products bought online or
through pick-up services
-
Enabling technology:
-
Eon — an IoT tracking system for understanding how bags are being
utilized across the value chain
-
Fill It Forward — the company created a tag and app that connects to
the reusable bag consumers already own, allowing them to track
environmental impact, earn rewards, and help give nutritious food to
people in need
-
SmartC — an IoT platform that incentivizes shoppers with rewards
every time they reuse their shopping bags
-
Innovative materials:
-
Domtar — developing a new bio-based, recyclable material of 100
percent cellulose fiber, but stretchable and more durable
-
PlasticFri — maker of starch-based, compostable bags made from
agricultural waste
-
Sway — maker of compostable, carbon-negative plastic bags made from
seaweed
The selection process
Over 450 innovators from around the world entered the Beyond the Bag Challenge.
The cohort of 9 winners were selected from a shortlist of 58 promising concepts
that addressed criteria in three areas:
-
People: The solution must maintain the convenience, efficiency and
effectiveness of the single-use plastic bag for customers and retail
employees alike. It must take into account accessibility and inclusivity;
-
Business: It must have attainable, long-term value for retailers in a
variety of environments;
-
Planet: It must operate within a circular system and lessen or eliminate
environmental and social harm in its sourcing, production, useful life and
end-of-life.
The winners all receive a portion of $1 million in prize money and are eligible
for additional financial support to support testing, piloting and scaling
efforts. They will now work closely with the Consortium to prototype, refine and
test the viability of their designs to scale as long-term solutions.
“We congratulate the organizers, partners and innovators of this initiative for
the enormous collective effort over many months to get ‘beyond the bag,’" said Chever Voltmer, plastics initiative director at Ocean Conservancy. "Single-use plastic bags are one of the most prevalent, most insidious forms of
ocean plastic pollution, and we were heartened by the creativity and sheer
volume of submissions seeking to address this problem.
“Identifying innovation is just the
beginning; and we need to take a holistic approach that accounts for
environmental impacts before, during and after the useful life of any
alternative materials or models. Sea creatures don’t discriminate between a
fossil fuel-based bag and one made of other plastics, for example; so ensuring
proper waste collection and investment in circular systems remains critical for
the health of our ocean. We are excited to see how each of the nine winners
progresses under more rigorous testing and evaluation during the next phase of
the Beyond the Bag Initiative.”
Closed Loop Partners’ Center for the Circular Economy offers a holistic approach
to tackling complex challenges to a circular economy, by operating across every
point of the value chain. The Center has so far united industry competitors to
uncover solutions to common problems — its first initiative, the NextGen
Consortium,
assembled food and beverage giants including McDonald’s and Starbucks to
identify and commercialize a widely recyclable, compostable and/or reusable cup.
In 2019, 12 winning cup
solutions
were selected; the Consortium is now testing these new solutions and conducting
select pilots to accelerate their path to scale.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Feb 17, 2021 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET