Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria

Background Food waste is a major ecological concern around the globe. While the main function of packaging is to contain and protect food, it may also lead to food waste if residues remain in a package after emptying. Such residues could be attributed to wasteful behavior of consumers, but also to p...

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Main Authors: Bernhard Wohner, Nicole Schwarzinger, Ulla Gürlich, Victoria Heinrich, Manfred Tacker
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2019-09-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/7578.pdf
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spelling doaj-228ab9ec9d254482b0a228ad2247df6b2020-11-25T01:54:09ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592019-09-017e757810.7717/peerj.7578Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in AustriaBernhard WohnerNicole SchwarzingerUlla GürlichVictoria HeinrichManfred TackerBackground Food waste is a major ecological concern around the globe. While the main function of packaging is to contain and protect food, it may also lead to food waste if residues remain in a package after emptying. Such residues could be attributed to wasteful behavior of consumers, but also to properties of packaging (e.g., geometry, surface tension) and food (e.g., surface tension, viscosity). Methods In this study, the technical emptiability (ability of packaging to be emptied entirely) of 36 dairy products is analyzed. Firstly, the amount of food residues in packaging after emptying at room and refrigerator temperature was weighed and set in relation to the original filling quantity. Secondly, streamlined life cycle assessments (LCAs) based on the Product Environmental Footprint guidance with a functional unit of “one kg of consumed dairy product at room or refrigerator temperature in the home of the consumer” are conducted. Finally, technical emptiability was included in the streamlined LCA and attributed to the primary packaging in order to evaluate its environmental impact. Results Technical emptiability for both temperatures combined was found to be between 0.25% (±0.11) and 5.79% (±0.43) for the analyzed dairy products. While there were differences in emptiability results of the same product and different temperatures, no significant trend (p = 0.94) between emptiability and temperature could be observed. Liquid yogurt, cream, and buttermilk in beverage cartons and plastic bottles yielded the highest amounts, while milk in beverage cartons and glass bottles yielded the lowest amounts regarding food residues. Looking at global warming potential, poor technical emptiability of cream in a beverage carton leads to even higher environmental impacts than the production and waste management of its packaging. Discussion The streamlined LCA results show that food residues can contribute substantially to the footprint of packaging and can have similar or even higher environmental impacts than packaging production and waste management. Yet, emptiability is remarkably under-researched to this day. Future studies should further develop the methods presented in this paper, while LCA analysts should include technical emptiability when assessing the sustainability of packaging, particularly for those containing resource-intensive goods.https://peerj.com/articles/7578.pdfFood residuesFood wasteFood lossEmptiabilitySustainabilityCircular economy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bernhard Wohner
Nicole Schwarzinger
Ulla Gürlich
Victoria Heinrich
Manfred Tacker
spellingShingle Bernhard Wohner
Nicole Schwarzinger
Ulla Gürlich
Victoria Heinrich
Manfred Tacker
Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
PeerJ
Food residues
Food waste
Food loss
Emptiability
Sustainability
Circular economy
author_facet Bernhard Wohner
Nicole Schwarzinger
Ulla Gürlich
Victoria Heinrich
Manfred Tacker
author_sort Bernhard Wohner
title Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
title_short Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
title_full Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
title_fullStr Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
title_full_unstemmed Technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in Austria
title_sort technical emptiability of dairy product packaging and its environmental implications in austria
publisher PeerJ Inc.
series PeerJ
issn 2167-8359
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Background Food waste is a major ecological concern around the globe. While the main function of packaging is to contain and protect food, it may also lead to food waste if residues remain in a package after emptying. Such residues could be attributed to wasteful behavior of consumers, but also to properties of packaging (e.g., geometry, surface tension) and food (e.g., surface tension, viscosity). Methods In this study, the technical emptiability (ability of packaging to be emptied entirely) of 36 dairy products is analyzed. Firstly, the amount of food residues in packaging after emptying at room and refrigerator temperature was weighed and set in relation to the original filling quantity. Secondly, streamlined life cycle assessments (LCAs) based on the Product Environmental Footprint guidance with a functional unit of “one kg of consumed dairy product at room or refrigerator temperature in the home of the consumer” are conducted. Finally, technical emptiability was included in the streamlined LCA and attributed to the primary packaging in order to evaluate its environmental impact. Results Technical emptiability for both temperatures combined was found to be between 0.25% (±0.11) and 5.79% (±0.43) for the analyzed dairy products. While there were differences in emptiability results of the same product and different temperatures, no significant trend (p = 0.94) between emptiability and temperature could be observed. Liquid yogurt, cream, and buttermilk in beverage cartons and plastic bottles yielded the highest amounts, while milk in beverage cartons and glass bottles yielded the lowest amounts regarding food residues. Looking at global warming potential, poor technical emptiability of cream in a beverage carton leads to even higher environmental impacts than the production and waste management of its packaging. Discussion The streamlined LCA results show that food residues can contribute substantially to the footprint of packaging and can have similar or even higher environmental impacts than packaging production and waste management. Yet, emptiability is remarkably under-researched to this day. Future studies should further develop the methods presented in this paper, while LCA analysts should include technical emptiability when assessing the sustainability of packaging, particularly for those containing resource-intensive goods.
topic Food residues
Food waste
Food loss
Emptiability
Sustainability
Circular economy
url https://peerj.com/articles/7578.pdf
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