Kelpi and Amcor have announced a packaging partnership that will see the brands working together to disrupt the fossil fuel-based plastic packaging market.
The partnership will see Amcor leveraging Kelpi's proprietary seaweed-based coating technology for its packaging to achieve performance-driven solutions that can be rolled out at scale. The partnership will thus help to accelerate commercial deployment at a time when mounting pressure is seeing brands seek out ways to transition to more sustainable packaging frameworks. The Kelpi and Amcor partnership could help to further reduce reliance on petrochemical alternatives, while still adhering to recycling requirements.
Kelpi CEO Hugo Adams commented on the partnership with Amcor saying, "This partnership with global leader Amcor is the ideal next stage of scaling up our sustainable packaging solutions. Our unique high-performance coatings and Amcor’s world-leading packaging solutions will present global brands with a leap forward in highly effective alternatives to fossil-fuel plastics."
Oceanic Packaging Partnerships
Kelpi and Amcor Partnered for Sustainable Performance Packaging
Trend Themes
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Seaweed-based Packaging — Marine-derived coatings offer brands a scalable pathway to replace fossil-fuel plastics while preserving performance, recyclability, and shelf-life requirements.
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Performance Sustainability — High-barrier bio-based materials are reshaping sustainable packaging by proving that lower-impact formats can meet commercial durability and protection standards.
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Circular Material Partnerships — Collaborations between material startups and global packaging suppliers create faster routes for novel renewable technologies to reach mass-market applications.
Industry Implications
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Packaging — Flexible and rigid packaging markets are positioned for disruption as renewable coatings reduce petrochemical dependence without compromising processing compatibility.
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Consumer Goods — Brand owners facing sustainability mandates gain access to differentiated packaging formats that support lower-carbon product portfolios and recycling alignment.
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Biomaterials — Seaweed chemistry and other regenerative feedstocks are expanding the biomaterials sector with commercially viable alternatives for barrier coatings and plastic substitutes.