Regulators are restricting substances like PFAS in food-contact packaging.
Retailers want real-time visibility into product freshness.
Sustainability teams are questioning the use of multilayer laminates and foil-based barriers.
Yet ~45% of the food and beverage packaging is made of aseptic cartons, widely used for dairy, juices, and liquid foods. Good for shelf life and long-term storage without refrigeration, but hard to recycle.
Why change your packaging?
The EU’s Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) introduces three direct constraints:
- PFAS restrictions in food-contact packaging (from 2026)
- Recyclability requirements for all packaging by 2030
- Increasing recycled-content targets through 2040
At the same time, food waste costs the global economy $1 trillion annually, and 56% of companies lack visibility into losses across the supply chain.
3.4 Trillion
Projected cost for food waste for 2025-2030
60%
of 8 trillion global packaging units are still plastic
The packaging moving with that food is still passive. It does not detect quality loss. It does not respond to it.
But what if packaging exists that is biodegradable, barrier-grade, antimicrobial, and responsive, without new migration risks or manufacturing complexity?
What You’ll Discover Inside the Report
Material Systems Replacing Legacy Packaging
Most biodegradable packaging only works under real-world conditions after adding metal oxides (TiO₂, ZnO) or stabilizers. See how the next set of material approaches focuses on removing additive dependence altogether, rather than optimizing it.
Where Shelf-Life and Packaging Function Start to Merge
Packaging is moving beyond the split between passive protection and post-facto detection. New Packaging approaches can adapt to storage variability rather than relying on fixed-release systems or delayed indicators.
Barrier Alternatives to Aluminium and Complex Laminates
Aluminium and multilayer laminates deliver barrier performance but lock packaging into structures that are difficult to recycle and hard to redesign. Find out how barrier performance is being rebuilt without additional layers.
Smart Packaging Beyond Standalone Labels
Freshness tracking with standalone labels and tags improves visibility but adds cost and integration complexity. Companies are now building sensing into the packaging itself without added components.
Download the Full Report
Get a clearer view of which packaging approaches are being developed to solve barrier performance, shelf life, recyclability, and food-contact constraints, and where R&D teams may need to rethink material and format decisions first.
