Prevented Ocean Plastic: BerryWorld steps up fight against ocean pollution

Supplier expands use of Prevented Ocean Plastic to supermarket own-label punnets [containers] after extensive trial on branded range last year

14 May 2021
Fred Searle

The packaging is made from recycled plastic botles collected from at-risk coastal areas
Photo: Prevented Ocean Plastic

BerryWorld has continued its commitment to reducing plastic waste by extending its use of Prevented Ocean Plastic to supermarket own-label punnets.

The move follows a successful trial on its BerryWorld-branded range last season when the company became the UK’s first berry supplier to introduce the eco-friendly packaging.

This season, the supplier aims to help prevent 222 tonnes of plastic from entering the ocean, equivalent to 8.9 million water bottles.

Supplied by Bantam Materials to Sharpak Aylesham, and certified by OceanCycle, Prevented Ocean Plastic refers to plastic bottles collected from the shoreline before being responsibly converted into high-quality raw material.

Prevented Ocean Plastic punnets have a minimum of 80 per cent recycled content, going up to 90 per cent, according to BerryWorld’s operations director Wickus Olivier.

Working in partnership, Bantam and Sharpak have recycled over 10 billion plastic bottles to date, collected from beaches in at-risk coastal areas such as South East Asia, South America and the Galapagos Islands, the Mediterranean, Central America and the Caribbean. 

BerryWorld’s announcement follows similar news from Berry Gardens, which has also started using Prevented Ocean Plastic in most of its supermarket own-label punnets.

Raffi Schieir, director of Bantam Materials, said: “We developed Prevented Ocean Plastic to be part of the solution to ocean plastic pollution and are delighted to be working with BerryWorld to offer its customers a better plastic choice. 

“By choosing products made from recycled content, it ensures recycling has already happened and use of new plastic has been reduced.”

The Prevented Ocean Plastic programme sees plastic waste captured and reused as part of the circular economy. This has a  positive environmental impact by significantly reducing the amount of plastic that ends up in the ocean and thereby reducing harm to marine life. It also helps reduce greenhouse gas emissions by recycling existing waste instead of creating new plastic.

In addition to the packaging rollout, BerryWorld is trialing two pick-and-place robots in its packhouses this season, for medium and large-capacity throughput.

In a bid to mitigate potential labour shortages, the supplier is also continuing to trial harvesting robots across multiple growing environments including glasshouses and outdoor polytunnels.

Read the original coverage from FruitNet at http://www.fruitnet.com/fpj/article/185226/berryworld-steps-up-fight-against-ocean-pollution


Informing and sharing news on marine life, flora, fauna and conservation in the Galápagos Islands since 2017
© SOS Galápagos, 2021

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Google photo

You are commenting using your Google account. Log Out /  Change )

Twitter picture

You are commenting using your Twitter account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s