Non-profit certification organisation RecyClass has updated its classification guidelines for recycling ahead of the EU packaging and packaging waste regulation (PPWR) that will mandate recycled content in packaging.
RecyClass will grant recyclability certificates classified as either 'Class A', 'Class B' or 'Class C', based on recyclability. It previously had other recyclability classifications, but the methodology change has registered these as 'Non-recyclable'. RecyClass certification aims to align with EU regulation on PPWR.
Class A will be certified by RecyClass when the packaging in question "does not pose any recyclability issues and the recycled material can potentially feed a closed-loop scheme to be used in the same quality application," while Class B will encompass "packaging that has some minor recyclability issues that slightly affect the quality of the recycled material generated. However, majority of recycled content from this packaging can still potentially feed a closed loop."
Class C certification implies there may be some issues with recyclability that can affect the quality of the recycled product.
From 1 January 2030, the PPWR bans single-use plastic packaging for unprocessed fresh fruit and vegetables, and for foods and beverages filled and consumed in cafes and restaurants. Targets for minimum recycled content in plastic packaging are set for 2030 at 30pc for contact-sensitive PET packaging, 10pc for non-PET contact-sensitive packaging, 30pc for single-use plastic beverage bottles and 35pc for other plastic packaging.
For 2040, the targets rise to a respective 50pc and 25pc for PET and non-PET contact-sensitive packaging and to 65pc for single-use plastic beverage bottles and other plastic packaging.