How the Largest Food & Beverage Brands are Attempting to Handle the Plastic Crisis in 2024
As environmental concerns mount and plastic pollution continues to grow, the Food and Beverage sector has become increasingly focused on sustainability - particularly in packaging. And for good reason. A new 2024 study using pollution data from 2018–2022 across 84 countries found that 56 global companies are responsible for more than half of all branded plastic pollution, with the top four brands (the Coca-Cola Company, PepsiCo, Nestlé, and Danone) together accounting for over 20%. But while there is a lot of progress to be made on the packaging front (particularly by these MNCs), there is hope, too. These four global brands are all taking steps towards addressing their own packaging and supply chains and tackling the plastic crisis head-on.
The company aims to make more packaging changes in the near future, too. Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages, a local Coca-Cola bottler serving the northeastern US including New York City, will collaborate with WestRock, a sustainable packaging solutions provider, to make the leap from plastic rings to recyclable paperboard carriers for multipack bottled beverages, with a goal to replace 200,000 pounds of plastic a year.
Coca-Cola
Coca-Cola’s recycling goals as a company include making 100% of its packaging recyclable globally by 2025 and using at least 50% recycled material in its packaging by 2030, and they are well on their way to completing both. In 2021, Coca‑Cola North America launched its first bottles made with 100% recycled PET (rPET). Coca‑Cola was also the first company in India to launch a one-liter rPET bottle, and they expanded their rPET selection in the country last year.The company aims to make more packaging changes in the near future, too. Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages, a local Coca-Cola bottler serving the northeastern US including New York City, will collaborate with WestRock, a sustainable packaging solutions provider, to make the leap from plastic rings to recyclable paperboard carriers for multipack bottled beverages, with a goal to replace 200,000 pounds of plastic a year.