Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) is rapidly evolving from a compliance requirement into a key driver of circular supply chains. As regulations tighten worldwide, brands are being pushed to take greater accountability for packaging waste while investing in the infrastructure needed to recover, recycle, and reuse materials. This article explores how effective EPR frameworks create economic value, strengthen recycled material supply chains, and support the waste-picking communities that make circularity possible.
Read MoreAccording to the OECD's Global Plastics Outlook, the systemic gap remains staggering: while global production continues to climb, only 9% of plastic waste is successfully recycled. Furthermore, research from Systemiq’s 'Breaking the Plastic Wave' framework suggests that roughly 11 million metric tons of macroplastics continue to leak into marine ecosystems annually, a figure projected to nearly triple by 2040 without radical intervention
Read MoreWhile the label “100% recyclable” has become increasingly common, it is based on a technical definition that does not always translate into real-world outcomes. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, only around 9% of plastic waste globally is actually recycled, highlighting a significant gap between theoretical recyclability and practical recovery.
Read MoreTransportation is one of the largest sources of greenhouse gas emissions globally, and freight accounts for a substantial share of that total. Road freight in particular, which handles the majority of domestic shipments for most organizations, is emissions-intensive relative to rail or intermodal alternatives.
Read MoreEffective as of 1st April 2026, the move toward 40% recycled content, particularly in food and beverage packaging, creates a clear direction for the industry and a more predictable demand environment for recycled materials. In doing so, it begins to address one of the long-standing barriers in the recycling ecosystem: inconsistent demand.
Read MoreAs regulators ease pressure or shift priorities, many businesses quietly reduce their ESG oversight. But the risks don’t fade just because the rules do. When scrutiny drops, blind spots widen. And those blind spots whether in labour practices, environmental safety, or supplier integrity can cost companies far more than compliance ever did.
Read MoreAccording to the World Bank, the global financing gap to achieve a circular plastics economy ranges from USD 426 billion to USD 1.2 trillion by 2040. Plastic credits offer a scalable pathway to channel corporate and institutional capital directly into verified waste recovery and recycling projects.
Read MoreRecent projections from Precedence Research show that the rPET market is on track to grow from USD 12.76 billion in 2025 to USD 26.78 billion by 2034, representing a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.53%. This isn’t incremental growth, it’s a doubling of market value within a single decade.
Read MoreSustainability commitments are driving a surge in rPET usage across industries. The European Union now requires all PET beverage bottles to contain at least 25% recycled plastic by 2025. Meanwhile, major brands have set ambitious targets of incorporating up to 50% recycled plastic into their packaging.
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