Overview #
Measuring the carbon footprint of packaging is no longer a voluntary exercise for brand partners selling into the EU, UK, or major US retail channels — it is becoming a procurement requirement. When brand partners ask us to support their sustainability reporting or help them select lower-carbon packaging options, we work through a structured Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) framework that covers raw material extraction through end-of-life disposal. The packaging categories where this matters most are rigid boxes, folding cartons, flexible pouches, and corrugated shippers — each with a very different emissions profile driven by board weight, print process, and coating type. The single most important insight we can share from our production data: switching from a 350 gsm SBS folding carton with full-coverage UV coating to a 300 gsm recycled-content board with water-based coating reduces the cradle-to-gate carbon intensity of that carton by approximately 18–24%, without compromising print quality on our sheet-fed offset lines.
Scope 1, 2, and 3 Emissions: What They Mean on a Packaging Production Line #
The GHG Protocol Corporate Standard divides emissions into three scopes, and understanding which scope covers which part of your packaging supply chain determines how you report and where you can actually reduce.
Scope 1 covers direct combustion on our factory floor — natural gas in our die-cutting and lamination ovens, LPG in our coating lines. On our facility, Scope 1 emissions run approximately 0.8–1.2 kg CO₂e per 1,000 sheets processed on our rigid box line, depending on board caliper (1.5mm to 3.0mm greyboard range).
Scope 2 covers purchased electricity. Our facility in Dongguan operates on a grid emission factor of approximately 0.5810 kg CO₂e/kWh (China Southern Grid, 2023 published factor). A full UV curing pass on our offset line draws roughly 45–60 kW per hour of production. Switching to LED-UV curing reduces that draw to 18–25 kW — a 55–60% reduction in Scope 2 electricity consumption for the curing step alone.
Scope 3 is where 70–85% of packaging carbon sits for most of our brand partners. This includes upstream raw material production (paperboard, inks, coatings, foils), inbound freight, outbound ocean freight to destination markets, and end-of-life processing. For a standard 350 gsm SBS folding carton, the paperboard manufacturing step alone contributes 1.1–1.4 kg CO₂e per kg of board, based on published Ecoinvent 3.9 database values for virgin kraft pulp board.
| Emission Source | Scope | Typical Share of Packaging LCA | Reduction Lever |
|---|---|---|---|
| Paperboard / substrate manufacturing | Scope 3 upstream | 45–55% | Recycled content, FSC-certified virgin fibre, lightweighting |
| Electricity (printing, curing, lamination) | Scope 2 | 10–18% | LED-UV curing, renewable energy procurement |
| Inks, coatings, adhesives | Scope 3 upstream | 5–10% | Water-based coatings, bio-based ink vehicles |
| Factory direct combustion (gas, LPG) | Scope 1 | 3–6% | Process heat recovery, electrification |
| Outbound ocean freight (China → EU/US) | Scope 3 downstream | 12–20% | Flat-pack design, optimised pallet density |
| End-of-life (landfill vs. recycling) | Scope 3 downstream | 5–12% | Recyclable mono-material design, no PVC lamination |
The implication for brand partners: if you want to reduce your packaging carbon footprint by 30% or more, the substrate choice and end-of-life design are the two levers that move the needle. Print process optimisation matters, but it is secondary.
LCA Methodology: How We Calculate and What Standards We Follow #
We conduct packaging LCAs using a cradle-to-gate boundary as standard, with optional cradle-to-grave scope when brand partners need full product carbon footprint (PCF) reporting for EU PPWR compliance or retailer sustainability scorecards.
Our LCA methodology aligns with ISO 14040:2006 and ISO 14044:2006, which define the four-phase LCA framework: goal and scope definition, life cycle inventory (LCI), life cycle impact assessment (LCIA), and interpretation. For product-level carbon footprinting, we reference ISO 14067:2018 (Carbon Footprint of Products), which specifies how to calculate and communicate a PCF value in kg CO₂e per functional unit.
The functional unit we use for folding cartons is 1,000 finished, printed, and die-cut cartons at a defined board weight and print specification. For rigid boxes, the functional unit is 100 finished boxes at a defined greyboard caliper and surface finish. This matters because comparing a 300 gsm carton to a 400 gsm carton on a per-kg basis gives a misleading result — the per-unit basis reflects what the brand partner actually buys.
For inventory data, we use a combination of:
– Primary data from our own production (electricity meter readings, gas consumption logs, ink and coating consumption per job)
– Secondary data from the Ecoinvent 3.9 database for upstream material production
– Supplier-declared EPDs (Environmental Product Declarations, conforming to ISO 14025:2006) where available from our board and ink suppliers
Our standard LCA report output includes a carbon intensity figure in kg CO₂e per 1,000 units, a hotspot analysis identifying the top three emission contributors, and a scenario comparison showing the impact of 2–3 alternative material or process choices. Turnaround for a standard LCA report is 10–15 working days after we receive the confirmed job specification.
Packaging-Specific Carbon Benchmarks Across Substrate Types #
Different packaging formats have very different baseline carbon intensities. These benchmarks help brand partners set realistic reduction targets before we begin material selection.
| Packaging Format | Baseline Carbon Intensity (kg CO₂e / 1,000 units) | Primary Driver | Reduction Potential with Optimisation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Folding carton, 350 gsm SBS, 4C offset + UV coating | 28–38 kg CO₂e | Virgin SBS board + UV coating energy | 18–25% via recycled board + water-based coating |
| Rigid gift box, 2.0mm greyboard + art paper wrap | 55–75 kg CO₂e | Greyboard volume + lamination | 15–20% via lightweighting to 1.8mm + FSC board |
| Flexible pouch, 3-ply PET/AL/PE, gravure printed | 80–110 kg CO₂e | Aluminium foil layer + solvent ink | 30–40% via AL-free barrier film + water-based gravure |
| Corrugated shipper, B-flute, 200 gsm liner | 18–26 kg CO₂e | Liner board production | 10–15% via high-recycled-content liner (≥70% PCW) |
| Moulded pulp insert, 400–600 gsm | 8–14 kg CO₂e | Low energy forming process | Baseline already low; focus on transport density |
The flexible pouch with aluminium foil is consistently the highest-carbon format we produce. The aluminium layer — typically 7–9 microns — accounts for 35–45% of the total pouch LCA carbon, because aluminium smelting is extremely energy-intensive. When brand partners ask us to reduce pouch carbon, the first conversation is always about whether the product barrier requirement genuinely needs aluminium, or whether a high-barrier metallised BOPP or SiOx-coated PET film can meet the WVTR and OTR specifications. For most dry food and personal care applications, a SiOx-coated PET film achieving OTR ≤ 1.0 cc/m²/day and WVTR ≤ 1.0 g/m²/day at 38°C/90%RH is sufficient — and eliminates the aluminium carbon penalty entirely.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a carbon footprint measurement or LCA project, we need the confirmed packaging specification first — board grade, caliper, print process, surface finish, and any lamination or coating layers. Without a locked specification, the LCA figures are directional estimates only, not reportable PCF values. The most common mistake we see is brand partners requesting an LCA before the packaging design is finalised, then having to rerun the calculation after a substrate change — which adds 5–8 working days and cost. Our recommendation: lock the structural and print specification to sample-approval stage before commissioning the full LCA report.
For the LCA process itself: we issue a data collection questionnaire within 2 working days of project kick-off, complete the life cycle inventory within 5–7 working days, and deliver the full LCA report with hotspot analysis and scenario comparison within 10–15 working days. If you need a third-party verified PCF for EU PPWR or retailer reporting, we can coordinate with our accredited verification partner — add approximately 15 working days for external review. We also provide a one-page carbon summary card formatted for use in your own sustainability reports or retailer submissions.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What board weight threshold triggers a significant change in the carbon footprint of a folding carton?
A: In our LCA calculations, moving from 350 gsm to 300 gsm SBS board reduces the substrate carbon contribution by approximately 14–17% per 1,000 units, since paperboard manufacturing accounts for 45–55% of total carton LCA carbon. If your structural engineer confirms 300 gsm meets the required BCT and stacking strength, the lightweighting step is the single highest-impact carbon reduction available without changing the print process.
Q2: What is your standard lead time for a packaging LCA report, and what is the MOQ for this service?
A: Our standard LCA report — covering cradle-to-gate carbon intensity, hotspot analysis, and two scenario comparisons — is delivered within 10–15 working days after specification lock. We offer LCA reporting as part of our OEM packaging service with no separate MOQ; it is available for any production order above our standard folding carton MOQ of 5,000 units or rigid box MOQ of 500 units.
Q3: Which international standards govern the LCA methodology you use for packaging carbon footprinting?
A: We follow ISO 14040:2006 and ISO 14044:2006 for the LCA framework, and ISO 14067:2018 for product carbon footprint calculation and communication. For EPD-based supplier data, we reference ISO 14025:2006. If your reporting requirement references the EU PPWR or a specific retailer standard, we review the applicable methodology requirements before starting the inventory phase.
Q4: Can you model the carbon impact of switching from a solvent-based gravure flexible pouch to a water-based gravure alternative?
A: Yes — this is one of the most common scenario comparisons we run. Solvent-based gravure inks typically contribute 3–6 kg CO₂e per 1,000 pouches through solvent production and VOC emissions, while water-based gravure inks reduce that contribution by 40–60%. We model both the ink-phase carbon and the change in drying energy (water-based requires higher oven temperatures, which partially offsets the ink savings) to give you a net figure.
Q5: What is the most common quality issue when brands try to reduce packaging carbon by switching to recycled-content board, and how do you manage it?
A: The most frequent issue is surface roughness on high-recycled-content boards — boards above 70% post-consumer waste content typically have a Sheffield smoothness value of 180–250 ml/min versus 80–120 ml/min for virgin SBS. This causes ink holdout problems on offset litho, resulting in mottled solids and reduced colour gamut. We manage this by specifying a clay-coated recycled board (CCNB or CCrb grade) and adjusting ink tack to 8–10 on the Inkometer scale, which restores print quality to within our standard ΔE ≤ 2.0 tolerance on G7-calibrated presses.
Planning a packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
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