• €60 million ($65 million) pilot plant in Sweden to accelerate commercialization of paper-based barriers that replace aluminum in aseptic cartons
  • Carbon footprint reductions up to 43 percent and renewable content up to 92 percent when combined with plant-based polymers
  • Investment aligns with policy pressure for traceability, recyclability, and low-carbon packaging across food systems

Tetra Pak is expanding its sustainable packaging research agenda with a €60 million ($65 million) investment in a pilot plant in Lund, Sweden, aimed at commercializing a paper-based barrier that can replace the traditional aluminum layer used in aseptic beverage cartons. The move reflects growing pressure on packaging value chains to reduce lifecycle emissions, increase renewable content, and improve recycling yields as regulatory scrutiny tightens across global markets.

A Shift Away From Aluminum and Toward Renewable Inputs

The company has been developing an alternative barrier material that increases the paper content in beverage cartons to roughly 80 percent. When combined with plant-derived polymers, renewable content can reach 92 percent, cutting the package’s carbon footprint by up to 43 percent. The shift reduces reliance on aluminum, which has a comparatively energy-intensive footprint and can be complex to reclaim in mixed-material recycling streams.

Tetra Pak stated that simplifying the material structure from three to two key components — paper and polymers — can enhance recyclability by improving fiber recovery rates and yielding higher-quality secondary fractions for downstream processors. That matters for municipal waste operators and brands facing extended producer responsibility mandates in Europe and emerging markets, where regulators are experimenting with packaging fees calibrated to carbon and recycling performance.

Why Lund Matters

The pilot plant will be located at Tetra Pak’s Lund facility, a site with established R&D capabilities, partnerships with Lund University, and proximity to advanced testing infrastructure at the MAX IV Laboratory. Co-location with academic partners provides an edge in materials development, particularly for scaling new fiber barriers that must withstand ambient storage, food safety requirements, and logistical stresses in global supply chains.

Joakim Tuvesson, Vice President Materials and Package at Tetra Pak, said the expansion aims to accelerate customer uptake.
By expanding our facilities and strengthening strategic partnerships, we aim to make our innovative paper-based barrier accessible to more customers, accelerating their transition to sustainable packaging materials. We look forward to starting production and welcoming first customers to the new pilot plant in the first quarter of 2027.

Joakim Tuvesson, Vice President Materials and Package at Tetra Pak

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Capital Commitment and Commercial Traction

The €60 million allocation forms part of Tetra Pak’s broader plan to invest approximately €100 million ($108 million) annually through 2030 in packaging innovation. The company launched the world’s first aseptic beverage carton with a paper-based barrier in 2023 with a Portuguese dairy producer. That commercialization won Tetra Pak the Resource Efficiency award at the Sustainable Packaging News Awards in 2024, suggesting early market validation for fiber-dominant cartons.

The pilot facility will allow customers to trial the material across the full production chain, from barrier formation to filled packaging. For food and beverage producers managing cost sensitivities and decarbonization commitments, in-plant testing lowers adoption risks and simplifies technical validation across shelf life, safety, and supply chain parameters.

Regulatory and Investor Context

Packaging sits at the intersection of climate, food systems, and circularity policy. The European Union is advancing rules that assign financial responsibility for packaging waste, restrict single-use plastics, and encourage design for recyclability. Food and beverage companies are also facing investor scrutiny through Scope 3 emissions reporting, plastic footprint disclosures, and circularity metrics embedded in emerging ESG frameworks.

Low-carbon packaging technologies that do not compromise food safety are strategically important. Aluminum foil replacements have been difficult to scale at aseptic conditions due to barrier performance requirements. If fiber barriers prove viable at scale, they could influence standards across dairy, juice, and emerging shelf-stable segments in Asia, Latin America, and Africa where cold-chain infrastructure is uneven and aseptic format retains advantages.

What Executives and Investors Will Watch

C-suite leaders will track three variables: cost parity relative to aluminum barriers, recycling yield improvements for municipal systems and extended producer responsibility schemes, and the robustness of third-party lifecycle data to support climate disclosure. Investors will look for evidence that renewable-content and circularity attributes translate into regulatory compliance benefits and brand equity in markets where packaging is rapidly politicizing.

The pilot plant’s 2027 customer onboarding timeline places its commercialization window inside the regulatory cycle that will shape the EU’s packaging rules, U.S. state-level producer responsibility bills, and international negotiations on plastics. If successful, fiber barriers could establish a new benchmark for climate-aligned packaging in global food systems, reinforcing the strategic role of materials science in ESG transitions.

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