Chemical reports
Nestlé USA sustainability official: Packaging is a resource, not waste
Nestlé USA sustainability official: Packaging is a resource, not waste
"Unfortunately, a lot of times, consumers perceive the package that they are holding as waste. So we are transitioning and changing the mindset of thinking of that packaging as going from waste to going to a resource," said Nicole Camilleri, packaging sustainability manager for Nestlé USA.
"We want that package to be circular and protect that resource similar to how we protect water or our forests," she said at the recent Plastics Recycling Conference in National Harbor.
In early 2020, the company committed to investing up to 2 billion Swiss francs ($2.08 billion) to shift from virgin plastics to food-grade recycled plastics. Nestlé, at the time, pledged to source up to 2 million metric tons of food-grade recycled plastics and allocated money to pay a premium for those materials through 2025.
"So we have a lot of resources across our entire company working on these really important ambitions. We have structured ourselves into three different pillars. First and foremost, to develop the packaging of the future, this is where our R&D community, our technical, manufacturing, the procurement teams come together to ensure that every package we put out in the market is designed appropriately for circularity," Camilleri said.
"Secondly, to help shape a waste-free future. This is really critical, and this is where our advocacy work and our coalition work comes in. So that we are ensuring that every package we put out to the market has the appropriate infrastructure so we have access, we have collection, sortation and reprocessing as well as end markets," she said.
"And, finally, driving new behavior and understanding with our consumers," Camilleri told the crowd, including education and empowerment to recycle. "Because at the end of the day, it's the consumers who makes the choice to put the packaging into the recycling bin.