Welcoming The Collective Effort For A Circular Economy

circular economy

Australian Food and Grocery Council (AFGC) CEO Tanya Barden has welcomed decisions by the nation’s environment ministers that support the food and grocery manufacturing sector’s efforts to reduce plastic packaging waste, including developing the National Plastics Recycling Scheme (NPRS).

“Food and beverage manufacturers have long supported reducing the environmental footprint of packaging without compromising the health and safety of consumers or contributing to food waste,” Barden said after state, territory and federal ministers met for the Environment Ministers’ Meeting in Sydney on Friday, June 9.

“The announcement from environment ministers is a solid signal to our industry of support for these goals, and we look forward to collaborating with governments and supply chain partners to deliver meaningful outcomes.”

Barden continued that it was encouraging that the announcement included plans around introducing harmonised kerbside collection standards, a measure essential in providing certainty to manufacturers when developing new packaging.

“And because traceability is an essential part of any circular economy, the ministers’ plans to develop a national framework for recycled content traceability is welcome news to our members as they source quality recycled materials.”

The AFGC has been working with stakeholders across the supply chain to develop the NPRS, an industry-led scheme to close the loop on soft plastics. The Environment Ministers’ Meeting’s agreement to pursue measures such as harmonisation of kerbside standards and traceability is welcome as they align with essential elements of this scheme.

Barden said the organisation's pioneering soft plastic recycling scheme was impossible without traceability and harmonised kerbside recycling standards. So it congratulated the Ministers for their attention to these important aspects.