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Green Packaging Requires Technology

Efficiency in green packaging requires technology, but this can often be difficult when your data is siloed in outdated management systems.

Posted on 
May 20, 2017
Matthew Wright
Founder & CEO, Specright

The rough definition of “green packaging" is using the lightest material, made from the least impactful source, highest recycled content, locally made with a low carbon footprint, procured and produced in the most efficient system.

That’s a mouthful.

How do you understand and manage all of these elements to develop the most environmentally friendly packaging?

  • Accurate data is mandatory to maximize the benefits of all aspects of green packaging. Imagine being able to share good data back and forth with testing labs, academia, new product developers, logistics providers, and retailers. Now you can ask yourself "how much more innovative could my packaging be?"
  • Analysis of this data is needed to best understand what is "most" green and where to focus your efforts. For example, if you get a bag from 100% recycled content that is made 2,000 miles away, is it better than one that is made 20 miles away from 50% recycled content? Which one is better for the earth today and tomorrow?
  • Widespread adoption is required to make green packaging truly sustainable. If you find a green solution but mass demand is not there, then the price is not workable. A platform is needed to share this finding with like converts. You need to be able to quickly adapt a specification to a more sustainable version that can be shared instantly for costing and availability.
Green packaging requires technology

To do the above, you need technology and all parties in your supply chain need access – imagine a software platform to instantly scorecard your success and share it with others. By using technology to increase sustainability, you not only help the earth but you free up packaging engineers to work on innovative and progressive designs with new materials you now have access to.

Sustainability-driven design software programs are very powerful tools for creating environmentally friendly packaging designs. However, to fully empower those systems, they need to be connected to a larger hub of comprehensive data. Collaboration on a common platform enables businesses to create a green supply chain with transportation companies, packaging providers, retailers, and your own internal employees.

The most efficient systems are arguably the most green. Quality errors, which double the negative environmental impact, are avoided with good clean data deployed in an efficient manner. Eliminating non-conformances will significantly reduce packaging waste.

From the vendor perspective, packaging suppliers can develop the right green products in the right places if they know the true data and have access to it. Enabling packaging producers to know where to build new plants, what type of products need a green solution and which companies have the ability to easily change creates efficiency in green progress.

We must involve technology in solving these problems or else we are just shuffling the issue around and not making progress. With the trend of more and more packaging being created, this is the only option.

About 

Matthew Wright

Matthew Wright is the founder & CEO of Specright. Prior to founding Specright, he spent more than 25 years in the packaging industry, holding leadership positions at International Paper, Temple Inland, and rightPAQ — a packaging company he co-founded. He has also been involved in leading multiple M&A deals in the packaging industry. He sits on the Packaging Advisory Board at Cal-Poly San Luis Obispo.

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