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Retail & Consumer

Orangina and Pepsi among major brands to unveil 'endlessly recyclable' bottle

A consortium of businesses behind some of the world's biggest drinks brands is using new tech to produce sustainable bottles

Orangina is one of the brands to use the technology in its new recyclable bottle(Image: M GOUGH)

A group of global companies including the firms behind Orangina and Pepsi have produced a new “endlessly recyclable” bottle made from plastic waste.

The consortium – Suntory Beverage & Food Europe, Nestlé Waters, PepsiCo, L’Oréal and French biochemistry firm Carbios – said it had created the world’s first bottles made entirely from enzymatically recycled plastic.

According to the group, each company has successfully manufactured sample bottles based on Carbios’ recycling technology.

Gloucestershire-based Suntory, which makes drinks including Ribena and Lucozade at the Royal Forest Factory in Coleford, said it was using the tech in its Orangina bottles first - but could extend this to its other brands.

The announcement is the culmination of nearly 10 years’ research and development by Carbios to create a new process and supercharge an enzyme naturally occurring in compost heaps that normally breaks down leaf membranes of dead plants.

By adapting this enzyme, Carbios has fine-tuned the technology to break down plastic (regardless of colour or complexity), which can then be turned back into like-new, virgin-quality plastic.

The consortium said it would work to scale the innovation to help meet the global demand for sustainable packaging solutions.

“In a world first, we have created food-grade clear bottles from enzymatically recycled colored and complex plastic,” said Carbios’ chief executive Jean Claude Lumaret.