Overview #
Sustainability in packaging is no longer a brand differentiator — it is a procurement requirement. Buyers in the US, EU, and Australia are now asking us for FSC chain-of-custody certificates, carbon footprint data per thousand units, and recyclability declarations before they issue a purchase order. This guide covers how we approach eco-certifications, material selection, bio-based alternatives, and lifecycle carbon accounting across our folding carton, rigid box, and flexible packaging lines. The single most important insight we can share: recyclability is determined at the material specification stage, not at the end of the production line — and most brands brief us too late to change it.
Eco-Certifications: What We Hold and What They Cover #
We carry FSC Chain of Custody certification (FSC-C[our code]) across our paper and board procurement, which means any job we run on FSC-certified substrate can carry the FSC on-pack logo under licence. For brands selling into the EU, this matters directly under the EU Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR, 2025 revision), which mandates minimum recycled content thresholds — 35% for paper-based packaging by 2030, rising to 65% by 2040.
On the ink and coating side, all our water-based flexo and offset inks are formulated to comply with EU No. 10/2011 migration limits for indirect food contact, and our UV-curable coatings are tested to REACH SVHC (Substances of Very High Concern) thresholds — no substance on the REACH candidate list above 0.1% w/w. For brands targeting the US market, our food-contact paper substrates are sourced to FDA 21 CFR 176.170 compliance.
We also hold ISO 14001:2015 Environmental Management System certification at our main production facility, which means our energy consumption, waste streams, and chemical usage are audited annually by a third-party body — not self-declared.
Materials Comparison: Sustainability Scores Across Substrate Types #
When a brand partner asks us to recommend the most sustainable substrate for their packaging brief, we evaluate four dimensions: recycled content availability, recyclability in end-market infrastructure, bio-based content potential, and carbon intensity per kilogram of material. The table below reflects our current supplier data and production experience across the substrates we run most frequently.
| Substrate | Recycled Content Available | End-of-Life Recyclability | Typical Carbon Intensity (kg CO₂e/kg) | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Virgin SBS board (300–400 gsm) | 0% (virgin fibre) | High — widely recycled | 0.9–1.1 | No recycled content; FSC sourcing required |
| Recycled greyboard (1.5–3.0 mm) | 80–100% post-consumer | High — widely recycled | 0.5–0.7 | Surface quality limits direct print; requires liner |
| Kraft paper (80–120 gsm) | 30–70% depending on grade | High — widely recycled | 0.6–0.8 | Limited colour gamut; not suited for high-gloss finish |
| PET laminate flexible film | 0–30% rPET available | Low — multi-layer barrier | 2.8–3.5 | Laminate structure breaks recyclability in most markets |
| Bio-based PLA film | 100% bio-based (corn/sugarcane) | Low — requires industrial composting | 1.2–2.0 | Compostability only in certified facilities (EN 13432) |
| Monomaterial PE flexible pouch | 0–30% rPE available | Moderate — store drop-off in US/EU | 1.8–2.4 | Barrier performance lower than PET/foil laminates |
The carbon intensity figures above are cradle-to-gate (raw material extraction through our factory gate) and are consistent with published Ecoinvent 3.9 database values. We do not fabricate these numbers — if a brand needs a verified product carbon footprint (PCF) to ISO 14067:2018 standard, we can commission a third-party LCA study; typical turnaround is 6–8 weeks and covers Scope 1, 2, and upstream Scope 3 emissions.
Bio-Based and Recycled Alternatives: Production Realities #
Bio-based and recycled materials perform differently on press and in converting, and we brief every brand partner on this before sampling.
Recycled greyboard (used in our rigid box line at 1.5–2.5 mm caliper) has a rougher surface than virgin SBS. We always specify a 128–157 gsm coated art paper liner on the exterior panel — without it, ink holdout is inconsistent and colour density drops by 15–20% compared to our standard SBS jobs. The liner adds approximately 8–12% to board cost but keeps the recycled content of the overall structure above 70% by weight.
Recycled kraft paper at 90–120 gsm runs well on our flexo lines with water-based inks, but we limit screen rulings to 100–120 lpi to avoid dot gain on the rougher surface. For brands wanting a natural aesthetic with FSC certification, this is our most cost-effective sustainable substrate.
PLA films are the most misunderstood material we are asked about. PLA is bio-based and certified compostable to EN 13432 (industrial composting, 60°C, 90-day degradation), but it is not recyclable in standard paper or plastic streams. We advise brands to use PLA only when their end consumer has genuine access to industrial composting infrastructure — which in most US and EU markets is below 15% of households. If the brief is “sustainable flexible packaging,” a monomaterial PE pouch with 30% rPE content and store drop-off recyclability is usually a more honest environmental claim.
Carbon footprint reduction in our production process comes primarily from three levers: substrate selection (switching from virgin SBS to 80% recycled greyboard cuts cradle-to-gate carbon by approximately 40%), switching from solvent-based to water-based or UV-LED curable coatings (UV-LED curing at 395 nm reduces energy consumption by 50–60% versus conventional UV mercury lamps), and optimising sheet utilisation to reduce trim waste below 8% — our current facility average is 6.2% trim waste on standard folding carton runs.
Specification Notes for Brand Partners #
When you brief us on a sustainability-focused packaging project, the most useful information you can give us upfront is: your target end market (EU, US, AU — recyclability infrastructure differs significantly), any on-pack claims you intend to make (FSC logo, “100% recyclable,” “compostable”), and whether you have an internal carbon reduction target we need to design toward.
The most common mistake we see is brands specifying a soft-touch matte laminate on a folding carton and then asking for an FSC or “fully recyclable” claim. Soft-touch PP laminate makes the carton non-recyclable in virtually all paper recycling streams — we will always flag this and offer aqueous soft-touch coating as an alternative, which maintains recyclability while delivering a similar tactile finish.
Our typical process: sustainability specification review in 2–3 days, digital proof in 3–5 working days, physical sample with material data sheet in 12–15 working days, production lead time 20–28 working days after sample approval. For jobs requiring a third-party verified PCF to ISO 14067, add 6–8 weeks for the LCA study, which we can run in parallel with sampling.
Frequently Asked Questions #
Q1: What recycled content percentage can you achieve on a folding carton without compromising print quality?
A: On our folding carton line, we regularly run SBS board with 30–50% post-consumer recycled fibre content with no visible print quality difference at standard 150 lpi screen ruling. Above 50% recycled content, we recommend switching to a coated recycled board grade with a calendered surface to maintain ink holdout and colour consistency.
Q2: What is your MOQ for FSC-certified packaging, and does it affect lead time?
A: FSC-certified jobs run on the same lines as standard jobs — there is no MOQ premium. Our standard folding carton MOQ is 3,000–5,000 units, and FSC-certified substrate is available at that volume. Lead time is 20–28 working days after sample approval, identical to non-certified runs. We do require your brand’s FSC licence number to print the on-pack logo under our chain-of-custody certificate.
Q3: Which regulatory standard governs compostability claims on packaging sold in the EU?
A: Compostability claims in the EU must reference EN 13432, which requires 90% disintegration within 12 weeks at 58°C in an industrial composting environment. From 2026, the EU Green Claims Directive will require third-party substantiation for any environmental claim including “compostable” and “biodegradable” — we advise brands to have certification documentation ready before printing these claims on-pack.
Q4: Can you combine recycled substrate with premium finishing like foil stamping or embossing?
A: Yes — we run hot foil stamping and blind embossing on recycled greyboard with a coated liner regularly. The key parameter is liner weight: we specify a minimum 157 gsm coated art liner for emboss depth above 0.3 mm, otherwise the recycled core compresses unevenly and the emboss definition is lost. Foil adhesion on aqueous-coated recycled board is equivalent to virgin SBS when dwell temperature is held at 110–120°C.
Q5: What is the most common quality issue with water-based inks on recycled substrates, and how do you control it?
A: The most common issue is ink strike-through on recycled board with high porosity — water-based ink absorbs too quickly and colour density on the reverse side drops below acceptable Delta E tolerance (we hold Delta E ≤ 2.0 against approved proof on all colour-critical jobs). We control this by specifying a barrier primer coat at 3–5 gsm before the colour sequence, which seals the surface and brings ink holdout to the same level as virgin board. This adds one pass but eliminates the strike-through risk entirely.
Planning a sustainability-focused packaging project? Contact our team to request a complimentary specification review and sample quote.
On the recycled greyboard spec — what liner weights are you typically bonding to hit a printable surface, and does that liner layer push the overall recycled content below the 35% PPWR threshold before you’ve even started?
The FSC chain-of-custody piece is where most of our timelines actually break down — we’ve had buyers request FSC-certified greyboard (the 80–100% post-consumer grade) mid-project and the lead time jump from our usual 18 to nearly 34 working days because our converter had to source certified stock from their secondary mill in Poland.
The greyboard surface quality point is real — we spec’d a 100gsm uncoated liner on our 2mm greyboard rigid boxes last year and it added roughly $0.11/unit at 15k MOQ, which didn’t sound bad until we were running 18 SKUs and suddenly that’s nearly $30k annually just to make the substrate printable.
The 35% recycled content threshold for 2030 sounds manageable until you try to hold it on coated kraft below 90 gsm — we spent about four months last year chasing delamination on a natura-range bar wrap before the converter told us the recycled pulp fraction was causing inconsistent caliper across the web, which killed our register on a 6-colour flexo job.