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Coke launches plant-based PET bottle

The Coca-Cola Company has announced the selective global roll-out of its new PET bottle made from up to 30 per cent plant materials such as sugar and molasses.

The soft drinks giant said its PlantBottle containers were beginning to hit retail shelves across the world, with a planned production target of two billion by the end of next year. Hailing the move as a “major step along our sustainable packaging journey”, chairman and CEO Muhtar Kent said Coke was the first to bring to market a recyclable PET plastic bottle made partially from plants but said the level of plant material in the bottle differs from country to country.

“While the bio-based component can account for up to 30 per cent of the resulting PET plastic in PlantBottle packaging, the percentage varies for bottles that also contain recycled PET,” said a Coke statement. In Denmark, the bottle also has recycled content, meaning its combined plant-based and recycled elements make up 65 per cent of the material; 50 per cent coming from recycled material and 15 per cent from plant-based material. In the US and Canada, some 30 per cent of the content in the PET plastic comes from plants.

The bottle is currently available in Denmark in 500ml and 2 litre sizes, with a December launch earmarked for Western Canada for Coca-Cola, Sprite Fresca and Dasani, as well as in Vancouver for next year’s Winter Olympic games. The PlantBottle will also be available in some parts of the western US from January 2010.

Future launches next year are being planned in other markets, including Brazil, Japan and Mexico and China, the company said.

Sugar and Molasses

The bottle is currently made by turning sugar and molasses into a component in PET plastic. The company said its ultimate goal was to use non-food, plant-based waste, such as wood chips or wheat stalks, to produce recyclable PET plastic bottles.

The container is 100 per cent recyclable and initial research has indicated it had a smaller carbon footprint than conventional PET bottles, Coke said.

Source: AP-FoodTechnology

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