Avery Dennison-SABIC collaboration produces industry-first recycled polypropylene label facestock
04 Feb 2020 --- Labeling and functional materials specialist Avery Dennison has collaborated with SABIC in the TRUCIRCLE initiative to develop the “first-ever” recycled polypropylene (rPP) label facestock. Working to replace conventional PP labels, Avery Dennison indicates that the initial 2020 production capacity of the rPP label facestock will be expanded as new SABIC production comes on stream in 2021. The TRUCIRCLE initiative encompasses circular materials and technologies to enable product manufacturers to reach their sustainability goals.
Polypropylene labels are widely used in food, cosmetics and a variety of other segments, so improvements in this area can make a major contribution to sustainability.
Rob Groen in ‘t Wout, Senior Marketing Manager Film EU for Avery Dennison Label and Packaging Materials explains that both brand owners’ requirements and regulatory changes will be addressed by the new rPP label material.
“Label converters will soon be able to expand further the range of applications where a sustainable material is a viable option. Our pilot project will make this material available during 2020. We have come a very long way with adding recycled- and sustainably-sourced products to our portfolio and polypropylene is a very important addition.”
The new material is made via feedstock recycling (pyrolysis) of mixed post-consumer plastics waste. The full value chain – the film supplier, Avery Dennison, the converter and brand owner – needs to be ISCC chain-of-custody-accredited to use resin from SABIC to make the rPP facestock, so that the material can be certified as a “circular polymer solution.”
Rob Groen in ‘t Wout applauds the pilot project as an example of what collaboration can achieve. “We have worked closely with SABIC to make this new material a reality, and the result is the first-ever rPP label facestock. Our initial 2020 production capacity will be expanded as new SABIC production comes on stream in 2021, and we are looking forward to seeing how quickly we can work with brand owners to replace conventional PP labels. The goal of the pilot is to generate learnings to be applied in 2021 when there will be a wider availability of material.”
Same characteristics as conventional material
The new Avery Dennison material is food-approved and it offers the same properties as standard PP film. In contrast to mechanically recycled materials, which have the shortest recycling chain, but can often involve compromising on aesthetics and food compliance, the chemical recycling process used to make rPP means it has the same characteristics as conventional material.
“Some plastics such as PET are already collected with high rates, with a clean stream of high-quality material that can be recycled mechanically very well. There is not yet such a collection stream for PP, so washing and mechanically recycling to make new PP film is still challenging,” explains Mariya Nedelcheva, Product Manager Rigid Film EMEA.
“Among all the applications for polypropylene, the bi-oriented PolyPropylene (BOPP) used for labels is the most challenging to make from mechanical recycling. This chemical recycling process for PP is an important step forward for the labeling industry, and we’re very proud to be pioneering such an important improvement – bringing to market a sustainable PP material that is food approved, and both converts and prints well,” adds Nedelcheva.
PackagingInsights spoke to Avery Dennison’s Rob Groen in ‘t Wout and Mariya Nedelcheva during Labelexpo Europe 2019 about the supplier’s new-to-market product lines, including the recycled PET (rPET) liner, which uses 30 percent PET post-consumer waste (PCW).
Edited by Joshua Poole
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