Mars has teamed up with Evansville, Indiana-based Berry Global Group to transition the pantry jars for M&M’s, Skittles and Starburst brands to 100 percent recycled plastic packaging, exclusive of jar lids.
The pantry jars are widely recyclable and come in three sizes: 60-, 81- and 87-ounces. This move to 100 percent recycled plastic incorporates mechanically-processed recycled content and will eliminate more than 1,300 metric tons of virgin plastic annually.
The material used for the jars – post-consumer resin – is a packaging option made from recycled plastics collected from consumers. This option helps prevent plastic waste from ending in landfills, decreases virgin plastic consumption and reduces emissions while promoting a circular economy. For instance, once these pantry jars are empty of treats, a consumer can place the lid back on the container and put it in a recycling bin – the plastic can be used to make new products.
The easy-grip square jars are produced at Berry’s manufacturing facility using certified food-grade mechanically recycled resin sourced from curbside collection streams. Leveraging its material science expertise and technical resources, Berry collaborated with Mars to create a solution to further their mutual sustainability goals without impacting product quality.
“As companies across the globe commit to transitioning to a circular economy, the ability to deliver products made with recycled materials at scale is crucial,” said Peter Goshorn, VP of food, beverage and spirits for Berry Global’s Consumer Packaging North America Division.
“That’s why we’re collaborating with leading brands, like Mars, to significantly increase the use of recycled content to drive responsible business growth without compromising performance or aesthetics.”
As part of its Sustainable Packaging Plan, Mars has been redesigning its packaging portfolio to reduce plastic packaging and redesign packaging to ensure it can be reusable, recyclable or compostable. Mars has been partnering with Berry since 2017 to innovate sustainable packaging.
“In the world we want tomorrow, no packaging becomes waste but is instead reused, recycled or composted,” said Allison Lin, global VP of packaging sustainability at Mars.
“That’s why we continue to rethink our approach to packaging and collaborate with companies like Berry. Reducing our virgin plastic usage by investing in recycled content is an important step in our strategy, alongside initiatives to remove unnecessary packaging, explore reuse models and redesign our packaging for circularity. Using recycled content incentivizes increased collection systems and recycling infrastructure, which is essential for a circular economy.”
Through the collective effort of hundreds of Mars employees, and in partnership with organizations like Berry, Mars is redesigning 12,000 packaging components.
[RELATED: Mars Elevating The Category With Innovative Products]