Loughborough awarded £1m to research alternatives to single-use plastic packaging

a variety of plastic packaging

Loughborough University has been awarded around £1m to help tackle waste plastic in the UK.

The Perpetual Plastic for Food to Go project (PPFTG) will develop, prototype, and evaluate a novel circular business model that combines smart-technology enabled products and services to reduce the environmental, societal, and economic impact of food to go packaging.

The project is part of a larger £8m initiative called the Smart Sustainable Plastic Packaging Challenge (SSPP) funded by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI), which was announced last week.

Its aim is to find solutions to existing issues with plastic packaging, reduce plastic pollution and unlock barriers to create fundamental changes in the industry.

Loughborough has received £917,000 – with the total value of the project being £1.15m.

The PPFTG project will be led by Dr Garrath Wilson, a lecturer in experience design, and involves Loughborough University colleagues from the Schools of Design and Creative Arts, Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering, and Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering.

Dr Wilson said: “Food to go, which includes fresh and chilled foods such as sandwiches and prepared salads sold by food retailers for consumption out of the home, is a growing UK market driven by a rise in convenience consumer lifestyles that unfortunately generates significant single-use plastic packaging waste.

“We recognise that no one single approach will overcome all identified issues, therefore our project will bring together academics with expertise in packaging technology, user behaviour, sustainable design and manufacturing, and polymer chemistry with project partners that represent the interests of all stakeholders and stages within the supply chain; from manufacturer through to retailer. Working together, we are going to eliminate food to go single-use plastic waste.”

Paul Davidson, challenge director of the SSPP challenge, said: “The Enabling Research projects are a huge step forward in enabling the UK to find better solutions to existing problems in how plastic packaging is made, used and disposed of.

“It aims to fundamentally change how we package and recycle items for the benefit of the environment.

“This funding will help experts from across the country address the important issue of making plastics more environmental-conscious.

“We look forward to hearing the outcomes of this project investment and how this will benefit both the UK and global environment.”