Ina
Bremenkamp
and
Maria J.
Sousa Gallagher
*
Process & Chemical Engineering, School of Engineering & Architecture, College of Science, Engineering and Food Science, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland. E-mail: m.desousagallagher@ucc.ie
First published on 26th August 2024
The high volume of plastic waste generated and its potential harm to wildlife and ecosystems are negative consequences of poor end-of-life food packaging management. An essential part of designing food packaging is minimizing its environmental impact, which is a significant challenge for the industry. The aim of this study was to examine existing life cycle assessment (LCA) approaches for investigating the environmental advantages of novel food packaging systems in the field of ready-to-eat fish and meat products. The scope of studies differed, with some including food products and others focusing on the direct and/or indirect environmental impacts of packaging. The reviewed LCA performances showed how different focuses could be used as sequential steps in obtaining a comprehensive understanding of the environmental impact of a food-packaging system. By considering a holistic LCA approach and evaluating the environmental performance of different packagings, industry stakeholders can make informed decisions. Therefore, playing an active role that balances necessity and wastefulness and creates efficient and sustainable packaging solutions.
Environmental significanceAddressing food and packaging waste is vital for protecting the environment. Research on eco-friendly packaging systems serves as a catalyst for re-evaluating our current practices undertaken to reach the overarching goal of minimizing adverse environmental impacts. Exploring various life cycle assessment (LCA) methodologies offers a robust framework for evaluating the environmental implications of packaged food products, packaging materials, and alternative packaging systems. Careful consideration of methodologies, breadth of scopes, and delineation of system boundaries are crucial for better eco-friendly solutions and imperative for equitable comparisons against existing packaging paradigms. These methodological intricacies are fundamental in the pursuit of novel food packaging solutions that offer superior environmental benefits. Emphasizing tailored LCAs for alternative packaging for ready-to-eat seafood can reveal targeted strategies to reduce packaging-related environmental impacts. |
LCA is defined in ISO standard 14040 (ref. 5), focusing on the principles and frameworks, and 14044 (ref. 6) gives more detailed requirements and guidelines. Further instructions on LCA based on ISO 14044/44 are given in the International Reference Life Cycle Data System (ILCD) Handbook7 or the handbook on LCA Operational Guide to the ISO standards.8 LCAs are divided into four steps according to ISO 14044, which are interrelated throughout the entire assessment, and each plays an important role. (1) Goal and scope definition: defining the functional unit, system boundaries, impact categories and geographical scope. (2) Life cycle inventory analysis (LCI): collection of data to meet the objective of the LCA study. (3) Life cycle impact assessment (LCIA): converting the collected LCI into related environmental impacts. (4) Interpretation: summary of the LCI and LCIA, sensitive analysis, conclusions and recommendations. It can be used with different focuses for developing eco-food packaging. IT can be used to investigate environmental hotspots of a packed food product, identify the interaction between packaging and products, or compare the environmental effects of alternative packaging systems to a benchmark product-packaging system. LCA has evolved in recent years and has been further standardised, but limitations such as the complexity of the analysis and the required full transparency of the selected methods, data sources and results are hurdles.3,9
When developing eco-packaging solutions, it is important to investigate the environmental influences of the proposed eco-design option to minimize the environmental impact of a packaging material, packaging system or food-packaging system. Almeida et al.10 highlighted that food packaging systems that can improve product shelf life and simultaneously limit the negative environmental impact of food packaging are of growing interest. LCAs can generate valuable outputs and support the decision-making process about more sustainable packaging. However, there are many different approaches to investigating the environmental impact of food packaging. The aim of this state-of-the-art review paper is to study the applied LCA approaches to support the development of novel eco-packaging solutions with a focus on solutions for ready-to-eat (RTE) seafood products. RtE seafood products are in high demand considering the current consumer trends of convenience, healthy, nutritious, mildly preserved foods and products with an enhanced shelf life and controlled product quality.11 This review focus points are divided into four subsections: (1) LCA studies focusing on food-packaging systems, (2) LCA studies comparing different packaging materials, (3) LCA studies comparing different packaging systems, and (4) LCA studies with alternative innovative (novel) packaging systems.
Food product | Functional unit | Impact categories | Packaging details | System boundary | Main conclusions on packaging | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
RTE pork and bean stew | 1 kg of prepared stew | 16 Midpoint categories | Primary packaging of RTE products: steel cans or aluminium cans | Cradle to grave | Tinplate used in metal can fabrication contributes significantly to packaging impact | 12 |
1 End point category (carbon footprint) | Secondary packaging of RTE products | Recycling tinplate can yield overall environmental savings | ||||
Primary packaging of intermediate products: cradle to the gate, without EoL | Substituting tinplates with aluminium is not recommended primarily due to lower environmental savings during aluminium recycling | |||||
Recommendation to reduce packaging impacts: reducing weight, increasing recycled content and/or increasing recyclability | ||||||
RTE wet/dry baby porridge | Consumption of 1 porridge meal (125 g) | Global warming potential, abiotic depletion potential of elements and fossil resources, acidification and eutrophication potentials, freshwater aquatic ecotoxicity potential, human toxicity potential, marine aquatic ecotoxicity potential, terrestrial ecotoxicity potential, photochemical oxidants creation potential, and ozone layer depletion potential | Primary packaging: | Cradle to grave | Packaging is only a hotspot for the wet porridge option | 13 |
Dry porridge: plastic bag in cardboard box | The main hotspots for the wet product are the manufacturing and packaging of raw materials | |||||
Wet porridge: glass jars using a metal cap with an aluminium and plastic lining | Using a plastic pouch instead of a glass jar would decrease most environmental impacts of wet porridge by 7–89% | |||||
Ready-made meals (e.g., Fisherman's pie) | Chilled ready-made meal for one person consumed at home in the UK | Global warming potential, abiotic depletion potential of elements, fossil fuels, acidification potential, eutrophication potential, freshwater aquatic ecotoxicity potential, photo-chemical oxidation potential, ozone depletion potential, and terrestrial ecotoxicity | Primary, secondary, and tertiary packaging of RTE meal | Cradle to grave (including food loss and waste) | Impact of packaging is below 10% in all impact categories exception ADP fossil with around 22% | 14 |
Additional packaging stages | ||||||
Raw material packaging and plastic bags at consumption | ||||||
Three types of dinner meals | One unit of RTE meal (507 g food) | Greenhouse gas emission, energy use, and waste generation | Primary, secondary, and tertiary packaging | Cradle to grave | Packaging greatly affects the environmental impact of RTE products | 15 |
Consumers criticize overpackaging of RTE food products | ||||||
RTE meals had higher packaging weight compared to other meals | ||||||
Optimize RTE meal packaging for environmental improvements and to align with consumer preferences | ||||||
RTE steamed Indonesian canned crab | 1 ton of canned product at market | Global warming, acidification, eutrophication, and abiotic depletion | Primary packaging: can, plastic cup, or pouch | Cradle to market | Processing stage has the highest impact for most impact categories mainly due to tin can use | 16 |
Substituting cans with plastic cups or pouches reduces impact by 70–85% per FU. | ||||||
RTE cooked European pilchard (Sardina pilchardus) | Amount of protein supplied by one can of sardines in olive oil (eq. to 17.26 g protein) | Climate change, ozone depletion; human toxicity; photochemical oxidant formation; particulate matter formation; ionizing radiation; terrestrial acidification; freshwater eutrophication; marine eutrophication; terrestrial ecotoxicity; freshwater ecotoxicity; marine ecotoxicity; agricultural land occupation; urban land occupation; water depletion; metal depletion; fossil depletion | Primary packaging: can | Cradle to grave | Packaging has a significant impact on canned products | 17 |
Secondary packaging: cardboard boxes | ||||||
RTE cooked sardine | 1 kg of edible product of canned sardine | Abiotic depletion potential, acidification potential, cumulative energy demand, eutrophication potential, global warming potential in 100 years, ozone depletion potential, marine aquatic ecotoxicology potential, and photochemical oxidation potential | Primary packaging:aluminium cans and boxboard | Cradle to factory gate | Aluminium can production has the highest impact, except for ozone depletion potential and eutrophication potential, due to energy demand and raw material extraction | 18 |
Secondary packaging: corrugated board boxes, pallets and LDPE film | -Recommendation for optimising packaging environmental performance: replacing packaging material |
Product | Environmental impact category | Environmental impact [kg CO2 eq. per kg product] | Source |
---|---|---|---|
a Adjusted to kg CO2 eq. per kg packed product. | |||
Fresh seafood products (chilled) | Climate change | 1.9 to 31 | 10 |
Fresh seafood products (herring to salmon) | Carbon footprint | 0.7–14 (average 3.2) | 20 |
RTE baked tuna in tomato sauce | Greenhouse gas effect | 11.87a | 21 |
RTE surimi (minced fish paste) | Global warming potential | 1.3–7.1 | 22 |
Fresh chicken | Global warming potential | 2.93a | 23 |
Fresh fish: all species combined | Global warming potential | 4.41 | 24 |
US beef (consumed, boneless) | Global warming potential | 48.4 | 25 |
Regarding the packaging, some studies included the direct impact of the primary packaging of the final product, some other studies included secondary or tertiary packaging, and then others considered intermediate product packaging. The direct environmental impact of packaging includes raw material sourcing, packaging material production, packaging production, and EoL material management. In general, it could be observed that the share of the direct environmental impact of packaging of the total impact of the food-packaging system can vary significantly within different LCA studies. The food to packaging ratio (FTP) in terms of greenhouse gas emissions of different products was compared by Heller et al.,26 who reported large differences in ratio values from 0.06 to 700. Fish and seafood products were identified, besides dairy, cereals and meat as a food category with a higher FTP ratio.27 A high ratio indicates that the impact of packaging is minor compared to the impact of a product. Therefore, changes in packaging configuration that lead to food waste reduction would more likely result in a net system decrease in the environmental impact, even when the packaging impact increases.26 Almeida et al.10 conducted a meta study of LCA studies by evaluating the environmental impact of packaging on seafood supply chains. The research concluded inter alia that packaging for seafood products presents only a small portion of around 5% of the climate change impact of products, which represents less than 1 kg CO2 eq. kg−1, and packaging represents on average 6% of the product weight. Exceptions were found when the product was packed in heavy materials, such as glass or metal.13,16,17,28 Molina-Besch28 investigated hotspot categories of different product groups, such as meat products, fish and seafood products and complete meals, and showed that the contribution of product primary production to the total global warming potential is high. When the contribution of packaging is low, the contribution of transport and distribution is low to medium and the contribution of EoL is low too. Additionally, the use phase can have a significant influence on the total global warming potential for complete RTE meals.
The investigated studies showed that the focus on food-packaging LCAs is mostly to investigate the complete food-packaging life cycle and to identify high environmental impact phases. Therefore, only direct packaging impacts were considered (Fig. 1), while the consideration of indirect impacts was more common when comparing packaging systems.
Packaging materials | Functional unit | Approach | Source |
---|---|---|---|
a aPET: amorphous polyethylene terephthalate, BVOH: butenediol vinyl alcohol, CDTR: carbon dioxide transmission rate, EVOH: ethylene vinylalcohol, LDPE: low density polyethylene, MAP: modified atmosphere packaging, PA: polyamid, PE: polyethylene, PHA: polyhydroxyalkanoates, PLA: polylactic acid, PP: Polypropylene, PS: polystyrene, PvdC: polyvinylidene chloride, rPET: recycled polyethylene terephthalate, TPS: thermoplastic starch, XPS: expanded polystyrene. | |||
XPS closed cells, XPS open cells, XPS-EVOH, PS-EVOH, aPET, rPET, rPET-PE, PP and PLA | Tray (with/without absorption pad) with a volume of 1 L preserving 500 g meat | Cradle to gate with end-of-life approach | 30 |
PS, PLA, and PLA/starch | 10000 units of trays with a fixed dimension (different materials have different weights) | Cradle to consumer gate | 31 |
Composite lidding films for MAP: LDPE/EVOH/LDPE vs. PHA/BVOH/PHA | Amount (g) of film required for 1 kg of produce (A) with the same carbon dioxide transmission rate (B) CDTR providing the same shelf life | Cradle to grave (without packaging, retail and consumer stage) | 32 |
PA/PE film, PE/EVOH film, PA/PE bag, PA/PE bag, PE/PVdC shrink bag, and PA/EVOH/PE shrink bag | 550 cm2 multilayer film for packaging 500 g bacon product | Cradle to grave | 33 |
Foamy PS tray | 1 kg of packed trays | Cradle to grave (raw material extraction, tray production, transportation, EoL) | 34 |
Multilayer multi-material tray (PE/PET) | 1 tray with a sealed lid for sliced meat (volume: 0.54 L, 30 g) with similar properties | Cradle to grave (manufacturing films, tray production, transport, assembly and EoL) | 35 |
Multilayer mono-material tray (PET) | |||
PP film (commercial) | 1 m2 packaging film | Cradle to grave (material extraction, film manufacturing, EoL) | 36 |
Chitosan film (lab scale) | |||
PHA-TPS layered material (biodegradable) PP (commercial) | 1 kg of packaged product at the house | Cradle to grave | 37 |
It was shown that LCAs are useful tools for assessing the environmental influences of packaging materials, revealing high impact steps of the individual supply chains and differences between packaging materials. The main environmental impact of the packaging could be allocated to the material production and waste management process.10 The use of recyclate or product waste streams can improve the environmental performance of packaging materials30,35 Mono-material solutions should be preferred to multi-material solutions mainly owing to the non-recyclability of the later.30,35 However, recyclable packaging does not directly mean the most environmentally friendly packaging because technical recycling does not automatically lead to actual recycling, especially for plastic films28,33. It was identified that the energy source used during production can have a significant influence on the LCA results. The use of renewable energy sources has been shown to improve the environmental performance of foamy tray materials.31,34 Additionally, the amount of material used and weight reduction were identified as the most important factors in improving the environmental performance of food packaging. It often even outweighs possible recyclability benefits.30,33
Comparative LCAs can be useful tools for assessing differences in the environmental performance of packaging materials to support decision-making processes concerning a more sustainable solution or to identify improvement options. Nevertheless, due to the significantly higher impact of the product compared to the packaging, a clear priority for material selection is product protection33 and avoidance of food waste, followed by packaging environmental performance. An LCA of packaging materials can give useful insights for developing an eco-packaging solution but also has limitations. The material LCA should be a complementary element of an LCA study in which the complete food-packaging system is investigated using a holistic approach to the decision-making process in regards to an eco-packaging solution.
Packaging systems | Functional unit | Approach | Impact categories | Source |
---|---|---|---|---|
a LCA of packaging: material production, packaging production and EoL. b AL: aluminium, BOPP: biaxially-oriented polypropylene, CtGa: Cradle to Gate, CtGr: Cradle to Grave, EMAP: equilibrium modified atmosphere packaging, LCA: Life cycle assessment, LCC-VA: life cycle costing – value added, MAP: modified atmosphere packaging, MPP: macro perforated packaging, OPP: oriented polypropylene, PE: polyethylene, PET: polyethylene terephthalate, PS: polystyrene, PLA: Polylactic acid, TPS: thermoplastic starch, XPS: expanded polystyrene. | ||||
Overwrap, high oxygen MAP, or vacuum skin packaging | 1 unit of packaging containing 500 g of sliced beef | LCA of packaginga | Abiotic depletion, global warming, ozone layer depletion, human toxicity, fresh water aquatic ecotoxicity, marine aquatic ecotoxicity, terrestrial ecotoxicity, photochemical oxidation, acidification, and eutrophication | 38 |
LCA of food-packaging system (food waste reduction based on empirical model) | ||||
Cellulosic fiber-based stand up poaches, flexible flow wrap, food trays and moulded pulp vs. BOPP flexible flow wrap, OPP/PE stand up poach, PET thermoformed tray, and PP thermoformed lid | 1 kg of packaging material, amount of packaging for a specific product amount | LCA of packaging materiala | Climate change | 39 |
LCA of packaging systems with equal protection functions for unspecified products | ||||
EMAP standard, EMAP optimized and MPP | 1 kg of strawberries eaten by the consumer | LCA of the food-packaging system (direct and indirect effects, mainly food waste and loss) | Acidification of terrestrial and freshwater, cancer human health effects, climate change, ecotoxicity in freshwater, eutrophication of marine and freshwater, eutrophication of terrestrial, ionizing radiation, land use, non-cancer human health effects, ozone depletion, photochemical ozone formation, resource use – energy carrier, resource use – mineral and metals, respiratory inorganics, water scarcity | 40 |
(1) Coloured PP bottle with coloured PP cap, multilayer seal (PE/PET/adhesive/AL), and PP label; (2) clear transparent PP bottle, coloured PP cap, multilayer seal and PP label; (3) clear transparent PP bottle, coloured PP cap, multilayer seal, and paper label; (4) flint packaging glass, tinplate screw cap, paper labels | Per average consumption per capita in Austria (3.8 kg consumed product) | (A) Food loss quantification: Determination of food waste due to poor emptiability | Climate change, resource use, fossils, water use, eutrophication, freshwater, acidification, and particulate matter | 41 |
(B) LCA and LCC-VA | ||||
(C) Combining the results of LCA and LCC-VA using multi-criteria decision analysis | ||||
Diverse dairy product packaging systems | 1 kg of consumed product | Streamline LCA of a food-packaging system (including food waste based on packaging emptiability) | Acidification, respiratory effect, inorganics, climate change, eutrophication terrestrial and freshwater, resource use – fossils | 42 |
XPS tray with film vs. high barrier vacuum skin pack | 1 kg of food eaten by consumer | Food-packaging LCA (CtGr, direct and indirect effect: On food loss reduction at consumer phase) | GHG emission | 43 |
Break-even rate calculation | ||||
Consumer behaviour scenario analysis | ||||
PET tray with wrapping with air headspace vs. tray with wrapping with MAP headspace | A tray containing two cheesecakes (total 300 g) | (A) Food-packaging screening LCA (CtGa + disposal of food and packaging, direct and indirect effects: Shelf life extension) | Climate change human health, ozone depletion, human toxicity, photochemical oxidant formation, particulate matter formation, ionising radiation, climate change ecosystems, terrestrial acidification, freshwater eutrophication, terrestrial ecotoxicity, freshwater ecotoxicity, marine ecotoxicity, agricultural land occupation, urban land occupation, natural land transformation, metal depletion, and fossil depletion | 44 |
(B) Economic and environmental-based decision making | ||||
Tube vs. tray | 1 kg eaten minced meat | Simplified food-packaging LCA (direct and indirect effects: consumer behaviour as easy to empty, clean, separate, and fold, mass, sorting information, and shelf life) | GHG emissions, acidification, ozone depletion | 45 |
PS-based tray vs. Al-bowl | One tray (for one piece of poultry product) with the same function and same performance (shelf life) | Packaging LCA (CtGr, direct impact and indirect impact: energy use during cooking) | GHG emission, cumulative energy demand, climate change, ozone depletion, human toxicity, particulate matter, ionizing radiation, photochemical ozone formation, acidification, terrestrial-fresh water and marine eutrophication, freshwater ecotoxicity, land use, water resource depletion, mineral, fossil and resource depletion | 46 |
Daypacks, glass jars, and steel cans | Packages for one ton of olives for aperitif and cooking usage | Packaging LCA (direct impact)a | Climate change, human toxicity, particulate matter formation, fossil depletion and ionizing radiation | 47 |
Metal can vs. plastic retort pouches vs. plastic retort cup | A retail unit containing 80–85 g tuna | Food-packaging system (CtGr, direct impact)b | Total carbon footprint, greenhouse gas emission | 48 |
Tin can, PP bag, PET bag, glass jar, PLA bag and TPS bag | 1 kg of packaging material | (A) LCA packaging material (CtGr) | Land use, fossil fuels, respiratory inorganics, minerals, carcinogens, acidification/eutrophication, marine aquatic ecotoxicity, fresh water ecotoxicity, acidification, eutrophication, abiotic depletion, global warming, terrestrial ecotoxicity, climate change, and ozone | 49 |
1 kg of packed product | (B) Food-packaging LCA (CtGr, direct impacts and indirect impact: packaging weight) | |||
PP; tin – PE; and carton – PE | Packaging unit for 1 kg cheese | Comparative packaging LCA (CtGr without consumer phase) | Cancer human health effect, respiratory effect, climate change, radiation, ozone layer, ecotoxicity, acidification potential, eutrophication potential, land use, mineral extraction, and fossil fuels | 50 |
Glass jar, plastic pot | One baby food unit of 200 g, with equal properties (shelf-life) | Packaging LCA (CtG) | Cancer human health effect, non-cancer human health effect, respiratory effect, ionizing radiation, ozone depletion potential, photochemical oxidation potential, ecotoxicity, terrestrial ecotoxicity potential, terrestrial acidification, land occupation, acidification potential, eutrophication potential, global warming potential, non-renewable cumulative energy, and metal depletion | 51 |
PE/PP/PA/EVOH, Carton/PE/EVOH, APET/EVOH/PE, PE/EVOH/PET | 1000 kg of each product consumed by the consumer | Food-packaging LCA (direct and indirect impacts) | Climate change, eutrophication potential, and acidification potential | 19 |
Functional unit selection was related to the study approaches; examples are packaging material amount, one unit of packaging system containing a specific amount of product, amount of product eaten by consumer and amount of packed product. An approach is to compare packaging systems focusing on direct environmental impacts such as material production, packaging production and EoL options.50 However, indirect impacts based on different packaging systems were neglected. Others performed LCA studies focusing on direct packaging effects by comparing packaging systems with equal packaging properties, thereby assuming the same indirect environmental effects, such as product shelf life.39,46,51 Schenker et al.39 proposed the first approach to study the direct environmental impact of the packaging material with a functional unit of 1 kg packaging material, which can be transferred to compare the direct impact of different packaging systems with a functional unit of one packaging unit to pack a specific product amount. Another proposed approach includes indirect environmental packaging effects besides considering direct environmental impacts, as packaging not only influences the environmental impact of a food-packaging system by direct impacts but also indirectly by interacting with the food supply chain.28 It has been discussed whether LCA studies that consider only the direct impact of packaging may lead to misleading conclusions regarding the effects of the packaging.19,52 Indirect environmental impacts were investigated to various extents. The potential indirect environmental impacts of packaging are summarised in Fig. 2. Multiply indirect effects combining packaging system design and consumer behaviour, such as easy to empty, easy to clean, easy to separate, easy to fold, product quantity, and on pack communication information, were considered in the study by Wikström et al.45 Other studies focused on a specific indirect impact, such as food loss reduction, due to shelf life extension,38,40,43 emptiability,41,53 content amount19 or consumer behaviour;43 effect on transportation and storage phase due to packaging weight and shape;49 or effect on product preparation at the factory or the consumer phase.46
Fig. 2 Schematil overview of indirect environmental packaging impacts on food waste, energy use and packaging waste, and the site of action in the food life cycle. |
The challenge when considering indirect packaging effects is the quantification of the relationship between food packaging and indirect effects. Relations between packaging and indirect effects were drawn using experimental data, literature data, mathematical models or consumer surveys. Another approach was the investigation of the break-even point or trade-off situation. Heller et al.26 calculated the relative increase in packaging system impact in two impact categories that could be afforded by a hypothetical food waste reduction of 10% based on the food waste rate estimated by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Wikström et al.54 concluded that a 1% reduction of red meat waste allows a threefold increase in the packaging impact without increasing the climate impact of the entire product-packaging system. The packaging in this study only contributed to 0.3% of the GHG emission of the product. A model for the calculation of trade-offs between product protection, packaging environmental footprint, packaging recycling, and FLW was presented by Williams et al.55 A consumer survey of Swedish households determined that 20 to 25% of household food waste was related to packaging design attributes, including the attributes easy to empty and containing the correct quantity. When such attributes are considered from the standpoint of reducing food waste, the potential of packaging to improve system environmental performance may be achieved.26 In relation to seafood or RTE products, further studies about the relationship between the effect on food packaging and product waste are needed.10
In addition to the variations in LCA studies comparing different packaging systems, it can be summarized that different conclusions about the sustainability of packaging systems can be drawn when only direct environmental impacts or both the direct and indirect impacts are considered. When only direct packaging impacts were reviewed, design options to reduce material amount, improve transportation, or switch to light weight options can have a higher positive environmental effect. When additional indirect effects were included, other packaging systems were favoured. Packaging systems with the highest preservation properties often permit the lowest food loss and lead to the lowest environmental impacts, especially for high-impact food groups. The use of highly functional packaging systems was often justified by the counterbalance between higher direct environmental impacts and indirect impacts, such as food loss reduction or energy savings (break-even rate). In addition to the importance of indirect effects, it was shown that consumer behaviour and economic aspects were important when assessing the eco-design of packaging systems. Ignoring consumer behaviour and preferences during packaging selection and only focusing on environmental aspects can be difficult to be suitable in the real market. Overall, it was highlighted that there are different important aspects in the LCA of packaging systems, such as packaging weight, packaging functionality (format options), energetic mix used in the supply chain, logistics, food waste reduction, household waste collection system, selection technology for waste treatment and EoL options, such as recycling and incineration with energy recovery. Therefore, to identify eco-design packaging options, it is important to study the present individual case scenario.
Packaging system | Function unit | Approach | Source |
---|---|---|---|
a EVOH: Ethylene-vinyl alcohol-copolymer, LAB: lactic acid bacteria, NP: nanoparticles, OEO: oregano essential oils, PE: polyethylene, PLA: polylactic acid, PP: polypropylene, PVOH: polyvinyl alcohol, ZnO: zinc oxide. | |||
Bioactive bag (PE coated with active coatings: PVOH and nisin producing LAB) vs. conventional PE bag | Bag with a capacity of 200 mL (or 218 g pastry cream) | LCA of packaging | 56 |
LCA of the food-packaging system | |||
Active packaging (OEO) and sensor vs. conventional packaging | Packaging container for about 10 kg of sensitive food product | LCA of packaging | 57 |
LCA of the food-packaging system | |||
PLA-coated film with NP (ZnO) vs. PP-coated film with NP (ZnO) vs. PP film | Packaging unit for 130 g of fresh cut lectures | LCA of packaging | 58 |
LCA of the food-packaging system | |||
Four nano-packaging systems for different food products | Amount of packaging to pack 1 kg of food product | LCA of food packaging-system with a trade-off calculation and a consumer study to investigate the relationship between food waste and shelf life extension | 59 |
Packaging film (PE) with alternative barrier coatings: Starch based, latex + kaolin, EVOH + kaolin PE | 1 kg of films with the same functionalities | Partial LCA of packaging with a focus on production and end-of-life | 60 |
PLA + silver NP, PLA + titanium dioxide NP, PLA + mixture of both | 1 kg active packaging material that provides equivalent effectiveness to ensure food safety and quality | LCA of packaging | 61 |
Conventional MAP packaging (PP/EVOH) vs. PP/EVOH + active coating (thymol/carvacrol) | Packaging unit for 1 kg fresh beef | LCA of a food-packaging system (with a focus on food waste) | 62 |
Tetra top beverage container coated with active coating vs. Tetra top beverage container | 1 L of consumed milk | Food-packaging system (with a focus on food waste) | 63 |
(A) Packaging can be investigated as an integrated part of the food supply chain, indicating the environmental fraction of packaging in the whole food-packaging impact. Moreover, the focus was often on direct packaging impacts, such as raw material sourcing, packaging material production, packaging production, and EoL management. For products with a high environmental impact, the impact of the packaging represented only a small fraction of the overall environmental impact. This emphasises, the importance to protect the product and ensuring it is used as nutritional source for consumption instead of ending as waste, therefore accumulating all environmental impacts of the supply chain without any use, which represents the worst-case scenario. Nevertheless, even when the portion of packaging units' environmental impact on high-impact food products is small, it should be considered that the accumulated environmental impact of the required packaging units and their waste accumulation impact can be huge. (B) Consequential LCA of packaging materials can be a useful tool for selecting the most appropriate material, e.g., comparing a mono-material with a multilayer material. In this category, different approaches were considered: only the direct effects of the materials were compared, or studies were designed to compare materials with potentially similar indirect effects, such as providing the same shelf life. The latter comes with more hurdles but provides a more realistic outcome. These approaches focus on the packaging material and can be extended by additionally considering the food-packaging system, i.e. the third approach (C). Having the advantage that a more holistic decision can be made. LCA comparing different packaging systems often included indirect packaging impacts in addition to direct impacts. However, quantifying the relationship between food packaging and the food supply chain can be challenging. Additionally, studies often focused on specific indirect impacts, whereas fewer studies with multiple indirect impacts were published.
By reviewing LCA studies of novel packaging systems, it could be observed that when only considering the direct environmental impact, the novel packaging systems have a higher environmental impact; therefore, including direct impacts is important. When including direct impacts, the environmental advantages are on the side of the novel packaging system mostly due to waste reduction resulting from shelf life extension. Overall, it was highlighted that besides the reduced environmental effect, consumer preferences concerning the novel food packaging system should also be included when selecting the packaging.
In conclusion, different LCA approaches were considered, and each one covered a specific goal. By observing the selected categories, such as sequential steps, a holistic understanding of the environmental impact of novel food packaging can be achieved. A clear understanding of the impacts and benefits of innovative packaging systems is an important driver of successful and sustainable innovations.
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