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Weyland Europe Starts to Localise ‘Closed Loop’ Packaging in Ireland

Weyland Europe Starts to Localise ‘Closed Loop’ Packaging in Ireland

Leading European thermoforming packaging specialist Weyland Europe has teamed up with Shabra, Ireland’s leading recycler and reprocessor of post-consumer waste (PCW), to purchase food-grade recycled PET (rPET) sourced from bottles, pots, tubs and trays to manufacture new rPET food packaging products at its Arklow production site.

Not only does the agreement help further secure Weyland Europe’s long-term source of rPET, but it also enables the company to expand its line of Eco Blend® products, made with post-consumer recycled content sourced domestically in Ireland, back into the Irish market.  

“Collectively, we hope these new agreements will advance our stake in localised plastics circularity in the Irish market,” said Eduardo Gomes, Managing Director of Waddington Europe. “We need to start moving to a more holistic and long-term view when it comes to the lifecycle and environmental impact of food-grade packaging. It’s just as important to consider the carbon footprint at the start of life as the environmental impact at the end of its life. Keeping the packaging ‘closed-loop’ economy as local as possible helps to ensure the carbon footprint stays as low as possible. It also utilises waste as a resource and keeps it out of landfills.” Shabra has recently invested heavily in new sorting lines and a reprocessing facility, which provide intensively washed rPET flakes for direct use in the thermoforming and packaging sectors.

Photo: Waddington Europe, a division of Novolex, has teamed up with Shabra, Ireland’s leading recycler and reprocessor of post-consumer waste, to purchase food-grade recycled PET (rPET) sourced from bottles, pots, tubs and trays to manufacture new rPET food packaging products. Shabra’s wash plant processes 1.4 tons of rPET per hour.
Photo: Weyland Europe, a division of Novolex, has teamed up with Shabra, Ireland’s leading recycler and reprocessor of post-consumer waste, to purchase food-grade recycled PET (rPET) sourced from bottles, pots, tubs and trays to manufacture new rPET food packaging products. Shabra’s wash plant processes 1.4 tons of rPET per hour.

Shabra has recently invested heavily in new sorting lines and a reprocessing facility, which provide intensively washed rPET flakes for direct use in the thermoforming and packaging sectors.

“We are very much committed to sustainability and a circular economy and all the benefits that go with them,” said Rita Shah, CEO of Shabra. “By keeping Irish plastic packaging waste in an Irish recycling system, we are confident that we can offer forward-thinking customers like Weyland Europe long-term savings, less reliance on foreign external suppliers, a positive public perception and increased customer loyalty. On a macro level, the localised economic model can increase jobs and innovation, the security of raw material supply and consumer savings, as well as reduce damaging pressures on the environment. To top all this, we have big expansion plans for 2022 that will allow us to double our output.”

Photo: The agreement with Shabra helps to further secure Waddington Europe’s long-term source of rPET and enables the company to expand its line of Eco Blend products made with post-consumer recycled content. Shabra’s quality control is advanced by the latest technology of Buhler flake sorters that remove all contamination.
Photo: The agreement with Shabra helps to further secure Weyland Europe’s long-term source of rPET and enables the company to expand its line of Eco Blend products made with post-consumer recycled content. Shabra’s quality control is enhanced by the latest Buhler flake sorters, which remove all contamination.

Weyland Europe’s Irish customers will also benefit from purchasing food-grade rPET packaging products produced through this localised approach. 

“Our customers are beginning to realise that if they develop these circular supply chains, they can reduce manufacturing costs and provide consumers with more sustainable products,” Gomes said. “Additionally, governments are noticing how local recycling and closed-loop economies generate revenue and drive local job creation. It gives us a competitive advantage to show that the products we sell are made from waste plastic generated in Ireland itself. Consumers can see the benefits of their efforts to recycle their plastic food packaging, and we hope it could even help shape our future regulation.”

To find out more about Shabra visit www.shabra.com.