Greiner Packaging and Holy

Greiner Packaging has unveiled a syrup bottle with an integrated dosing system in collaboration with drinks brand Holy, designed to flavour drinks individually during the drinking process.

Utilizing a reusable bottle combined with dosing technology, the companies aim to create a user experience that provides ‘convenience, personalization, and more sustainable consumption habits’ in a single product. Apparently, the new Syrup Bottle consistently separates water and syrup and only combines the two components in a controlled way during drinking.

The bottle is made of Tritan and the cap is made of ABS, along with functional silicone elements. Greiner Packaging says it further developed Holy’s bottle concept to industrial maturity.

The liquid dosing is made possible by a mechanical system in the cap. The bottle features an integrated carrier which uses IML technology for interchangeable syrup pods and the dosing system allows flavour intensity to be adjusted in five levels.

The companies add that the drinking bottle and cap consist of 13 components. The dosing mechanism is based on ‘extremely tight injection moulding tolerances’, including a central component with an opening of less than one millimetre.

The bottle is also said to be dishwasher-safe up to 50°C and intended for long-term use. Combined with interchangeable syrup pods, it forms a reusable system designed to reduce the need for single-use packaging.

The new product line also marks the first time Holy has used liquid concentrates for mixing instead of powder. The brand plans to gradually expand the new category and establish it as a permanent part of its portfolio in the long term.

Last year Greiner Packaging partnered with Air Up on its leak-proof refillable Click Bottle, which uses scent-based pods to add flavour to plain water without sugar, additives or calories. The bottle is manufactured with stretch blow moulding technology for a ‘lightweight yet stable’ product with ‘precise’ detailing.

In related news, TotalEnergies Corbion has launched an embossed, label-free PLA bottle for the South Korean beverage market, designed to integrate into a closed-loop recycling system established with Sansu. By integrating brand identification into the bottle wall, TotalEnergies Corbion says the design allows bottles to enter recycling streams without additional processing, supporting cleaner material flows and higher-quality recycled output.

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