The Body Shop to Reduce Use of Oil-Based Plastic Packaging by 70%

The Body Shop is launching a new global initiative to reduce the use of oil-based plastic packaging by 70 percent by 2020. In a recent an announcement, the beauty firm said it plans to explore a “number of new academic, technology, and research partnerships” regarding product packaging, product design, and product-life extension. “The Body Shop is a company that has pioneered different ways of thinking, a legacy we’re immensely proud of,” Christopher Davis, international director of corporate social responsibility at The Body Shop International, said in a statement. “We want to take action to reduce our impact on the planet, radically reinterpreting the way we sell and buy cosmetics and how our customers use them.”

Its first step toward achieving its goal is a partnership with Newlight Technologies, a Costa Mesa, Calif.-based company that uses carbon-capture technology to produce high-performance thermoplastics. The material, known as “AirCarbon,” is made using methane and carbon dioxide that would otherwise be released into the air as greenhouse gas.

AirCarbon, Newlight Technologies says, is able to meet the performance requirements of a range of applications, including current fossil fuel–based polypropylene, polyethylene, acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS), polystyrene, and thermoplastic polyurethane (TPU).

Although AirCarbon is already used to make products such as film packaging, rigid furniture, and electronics accessories, The Body Shop is the first to adapt the material for the beauty industry.

“The impact of our research commitment with Newlight we hope will support this global business in increasing resource efficiency of product packaging, providing market access to new ways of buying and using The Body Shop products and services and increasing the perceived value of packaging and materials,” Davis said.

Via Ecouterre

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