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Exploring the environmental impacts of plastic packaging: A comprehensive life cycle analysis for seafood distribution crates

Toxics 2024 23 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Sandra Ceballos‐Santos, David Baptista de Sousa, Pablo González García, Jara Laso, María Margallo, Rubén Aldaco

Summary

This life cycle assessment comparing disposable expanded polystyrene (EPS) boxes and reusable high-density polyethylene crates for seafood distribution found similar climate impacts for local and regional trade, but reusable crates showed a 12% higher carbon footprint for national distribution due to washing logistics and transport weight.

Annually, 8.3 million tonnes of mismanaged plastic waste enter oceans, prompting the food packaging industry, a major contributor, to minimize its environmental footprint. Within the seafood sector, a nascent number of studies are exploring the impacts of various packaging solutions for distribution, yet clear insights remain elusive. This study tries to fill the gap by comparing the impacts of two seafood packaging options: disposable expandable polystyrene (EPS) boxes and, for the first time, reusable plastic crates (RPC) crafted from high-density polyethylene. Using the life cycle assessment methodology with a 'cradle to grave' approach, the research evaluates the distribution of 1260,000 t of fish from port of Vigo (Spain) to various markets. Similar climate change values emerge in local (5.00·107 kg CO2 eq.) and regional trade (1.20·108 kg CO2 eq.) for both options, but RPCs exhibit around a 12 % increase (6.15·108 kg CO2 eq.) during national distribution, emphasizing package weight and load significance. The findings across all impact categories exhibited general consistent trends. The sensitivity analysis suggests relocating washing facilities to port could enhance RPCs´ environmental benefits for transport within a 160 km range. These findings underscore reusable packaging's potential as an eco-friendlier alternative in specific contexts, aligning with heightened environmental concerns and regulatory pressures surrounding plastic usage.

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