DS Smith joined Re-Zip and the Raja Group to support the Reuse Fast Track initiative in France, developing a reusable fibre-based e-commerce packaging solution through collaborative pilots with manufacturers, suppliers and brands. The year-long program aims to promote the reuse of 250,000 packages by recirculating returned packaging, demonstrating the commercial and environmental benefits of reusable systems at scale.
Re-Zip is managing the initiative's operations with an app that tracks returns and supports implementation, while DS Smith and the Raja Group will help ensure packaging remains in suitable condition for reuse. The program is open to businesses across sectors including cosmetics, apparel and FMCG, with applications beginning in July 2026 ahead of a September launch.
For retailers, the initiative offers a scalable pathway toward circular e-commerce packaging that reduces single-use waste while supporting existing fulfilment operations.
Reusable Fibre Packaging Collaborations
DS Smith Has Backed Re-Zip's Reuse Fast Track Initiative
Trend Themes
-
Reusable E-commerce Packaging — Circular fibre-based mailers create space for shared return infrastructure, condition monitoring and cost models that make packaging reuse practical at commercial scale.
-
App-tracked Returns — Digital return tracking can turn packaging into a managed asset, enabling data-driven reuse loops across brands, fulfilment partners and logistics networks.
-
Cross-sector Reuse Pilots — Collaborative pilots across cosmetics, apparel and FMCG reveal new partnership models for standardizing reusable packaging without disrupting existing retail operations.
Industry Implications
-
E-commerce — Online retail gains a path to lower packaging waste through reusable systems that integrate with current fulfilment and customer return journeys.
-
Packaging — Fibre packaging producers can differentiate through durable, trackable and recirculable formats that shift value from single-use volume to lifecycle performance.
-
Logistics — Reverse logistics providers become central to circular commerce as returned packaging requires collection, inspection, redistribution and real-time visibility.