UNESDA Soft Drinks Europe has announced a set of EU-wide ambitions to make the sector’s plastic packaging more sustainable. The ambitions aim to contribute towards building a circular model for plastic packaging by improving its recyclability, recycled content, collection, and reuse.

Beverage packaging is the most collected packaging in the EU and large soft drinks companies have been instrumental in driving up recycling rates by establishing and running many of the packaging recovery organisations across the EU.

The sector has already taken significant steps to make soft drinks packaging more sustainable and reduce its carbon footprint – including light-weighting programmes to reduce the amount of raw materials used; increasing the use of recycled materials and removing technical barriers to recyclability.

“Achieving circularity through optimal collection, recycling and use of recycled PET is a top priority for our industry,” explains UNESDA Director General, Sigrid Ligné. “UNESDA members want all their packaging, including plastics, to be collected and recycled and not discarded on our streets, oceans and waterways. To achieve this, packaging collection systems must be well designed, set-up and managed by industry. Improved collection and recycling, alongside greater consumer awareness, are key to increasing the rPET content of beverage bottles.”

The ambitions are that:

- By 2025 100% of soft drinks primary plastic packaging will be recyclable;

- By 2025 soft drinks PET bottles will contain a minimum 25% recycled material on average;

- Collection rates of soft drinks primary plastic packaging for recycling will be further increased and optimised in all EU markets in collaboration with other packaging recovery actors;

- Soft drinks primary plastic packaging will be reused – including refillable bottles – where it makes environmental and economic sense.

The UNESDA ambitions also contribute to the EU’s bold objectives including the European Strategy for Plastics in a Circular Economy – which calls for “industry associations” to “come forward with voluntary pledges to boost the uptake of recycled plastics”; and the proposal for a Directive on the reduction of the impact of certain plastic products on the environment - which seeks a “positive impact on collection rates, the quality of the collected material and subsequent recycling” in particular for “beverage bottles”.

The soft drinks sector supports growth of a secondary raw material market that makes food grade quality rPET sufficiently available, accessible and affordable. With these conditions met it is ready to go way beyond its current target of a minimum 25% recycled material on average.