Frugalpac introduced the FBAM-2, a high-speed production machine for its paper Frugal Bottles, featuring automation designed to scale paper-based bottle manufacturing. The company said the system was built to speed output while keeping the bottle structure compatible with existing packaging lines.
The FBAM-2 was described as capable of producing up to 14 million paper bottles per year and incorporates inline forming and sealing stages to maintain cycle times. Frugalpac positioned the machine to work with its recyclable paperboard shells and proprietary internal liners.
For brands and converters, the FBAM-2 promises higher volume output of a lower-carbon alternative to single-use plastic bottles, easing transition to fiber-first packaging. The launch signals growing industrialization of paper bottle supply chains and broader availability for consumer goods companies.
High-Speed Paper Bottle Machines
Frugalpac Launches FBAM-2 Machine for Efficient Bottle Production
Trend Themes
1. Industrialized Paper Bottles - Mass-production capability for paper bottles creates potential to replace single-use plastic at scale across mainstream retail supply chains.
2. Inline Forming and Sealing Automation - High-speed inline forming and sealing systems enable continuous, integrated production lines that could lower unit costs and improve consistency for fiber-based containers.
3. Fiber-first Packaging Adoption - Growing demand for recyclable paperboard shells paired with proprietary liners points to expanded adoption of fiber-first formats across consumer goods categories.
Industry Implications
1. Beverage Manufacturing - Large-volume bottlers stand to be disrupted by paper bottle availability, altering packaging portfolios and reducing reliance on petroleum-based plastics.
2. Consumer Packaged Goods - Brands in personal care and household goods could see packaging redesigns that emphasize circularity and lower carbon footprints through fiber-based containers.
3. Packaging Machinery Suppliers - Suppliers of filling and sealing equipment may face shifts toward new machine types and integration services tailored to paper bottle form factors.