Unilever United States Inc.

10/31/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 10/31/2024 05:06

Vaseline’s new recyclable pump supports Unilever’s plastics progress

Vaseline's new recyclable pump supports Unilever's plastics progress

Published: October 31, 2024

Vaseline is integrating a new recyclable pump into its Intensive Care Lotions in the US and Canada. Learn how this is supporting Unilever's goal to ensure 100% of our rigid plastic packaging is reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2030.

  • Vaseline's new pump in its Vaseline Intensive Care packaging is widely recyclable in the US and Canada, according to How2Recycle's assessment
  • Since 2018, Vaseline has redesigned its packaging and increased its use of recycled content, avoiding the use of virgin plastic equivalent to approximately 11 million plastic lotion bottles
  • Unilever aims to ensure that 100% of our rigid plastic packaging is reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2030

Vaseline has created a new recyclable pump for its pump-action bottles in North America. Traditionally, pumps in consumer goods contain an internal metal spring encased within the plastic, which makes them hard to recycle, because recycling facilities need to separate the materials before processing them.

Now, Vaseline has worked extensively with its supplier to develop a new pump that does not have a metal spring and is widely recyclable in more than half of recycling facilities across the US and Canada.[a] The packaging continues to deliver a quality experience for consumers, while simultaneously supporting Unilever's sustainability goals.

"Unilever's long-term ambition is an end to plastic pollution through reduction, circulation and collaboration," said Kristina Friedman, Head of Sustainability at Unilever North America.

"We continue to implement bold innovations across our brands and markets that help to advance the delivery of our sustainability goals. Vaseline designing its pumps for recycling is another step in the right direction."

Our plastic goals: reducing virgin plastic and increasing recyclability

Vaseline's new recyclable pump supports the delivery of Unilever's plastic sustainability goals. This includes Unilever's aim to reduce our virgin plastic footprint by 30% by 2026 and to ensure 100% of our rigid plastic packaging is reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2030.

For rigid plastic - like bottles, pumps and caps - we're making good progress. Vaseline is the latest of several Unilever Beauty & Wellbeing brands, including Dermalogica, REN and Garancia, to have incorporated forms of recyclable pumps into its product portfolio. For our Home Care brands like Cif, Vim, Viss, Domestos, Lifebuoy and Lysoform, we're continuing to roll out recyclable mono-material triggers for spray products.

Vaseline's progress on plastic

In addition to improving the recyclability of its packaging, Vaseline is reducing its use of virgin plastic. The brand has introduced 50% recycled plastic (known as post-consumer resin or 'PCR') into all the Vaseline Intensive Care lotion bottles in North America, avoiding the need for over 500 metric tons of virgin plastic since 2018. And by reducing the amount of plastic in its bottles - by making its packaging lighter - the brand has also removed more than 130 metric tons of plastic from its packaging. Combined, these two processes equate to removing approximately 11 million 20.3oz plastic lotion bottles from the market.

Beyond our own packaging, we're advocating for infrastructure and wider change

To help close the gap between what packaging is technically recyclable and what is actually recycled, policy and regulation are critical in improving waste management infrastructure and helping to tackle plastic waste. In North America, collaborations with The Recycling Partnership and the US and Canada Plastics Pacts, as well as investments in Closed Loop Partners, support the ongoing development of local waste management infrastructure.

Technical vs actual recyclability

Designing our packaging for recycling is important, but it's also only a first step. What gets recycled in practice and at scale depends on the available local collection, sorting and processing facilities. This is the important difference between 'actual' recyclability and 'technical' recyclability. While improvements to recycling infrastructure are largely beyond our direct control, it is something we aim to influence through our packaging design, partnerships and advocacy.

Globally, we also advocate for policies like Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR), which can help to hold businesses to account for the packaging choices they make and boost recycling systems. By ensuring that money is invested back into waste management and packaging innovation, well-designed EPR schemes can drive up recycling rates and the supply of recycled plastic.

Unilever co-chairs the Business Coalition for a Global Plastics Treaty, which is calling for a global plastics treaty that addresses the full life-cycle of plastic and sets global rules on our priorities like EPR, as well as product design, and restrictions and phase-outs. Global rules in these areas will help to harmonise regulatory standards and policies across markets, and accelerate the voluntary work already being done by the industry.

[a]

Based on assessment according to How 2 Recycle.