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Sustainable food packaging system: Status of regulatory initiatives and issues on plastic use in Tunisia, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania African countries

Fibres and Textiles 2025 2 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Maria Alessia Schouten, Ines Ben Rejeb, Faten Khamassi, Samuel Edgar Tinyiro, Cassius Aruho, Isa Kabenge, John H. Muyonga, Isaac M. Maitha, Michael Wandayi Okoth, Akwilina Wendelin Mwanri, Rashid Suleiman, Susan Nchimbi Msolla, Marco Setti, Santina Romani

Summary

Researchers reviewed the regulatory landscape and practical challenges of sustainable food packaging in four African countries — Tunisia, Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania — finding fragmented policies, limited enforcement, and a growing but uneven transition away from single-use plastics toward biodegradable alternatives.

Polymers
Body Systems

Sustainable food packaging is not only an environmental necessity, but also a crucial part of the broader strategy to reduce food waste and promote sustainable development in Africa, as in all countries around the world. The review gives an overview of the current landscape of food packaging systems in Africa, with a specific focus on Tunisia, Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania, countries actively involved in sustainable food packaging researches under the EU Horizon2020 FoodLAND project. The analysis begins with a description of the most used packaging materials and highlights the environmental and health issues of fossil-based plastics. National policies aimed at reducing plastic use and pollution are then examined. Finally, some relevant studies on bio-based alternatives using local resources are reviewed. The development of sustainable food packaging in Africa faces major challenges, but also holds a great potential. The continent is still largely reliant on traditional (e.g. plant leaves) and conventional (e.g. fossil-based plastics) materials. The former offer limited food protection, while the latter contribute to environmental pollution. Some policy/regulatory initiatives have been introduced to reduce plastic use, their effect is often limited due to several challenges. The reviewed studies demonstrate the interest of the African scientific communities on sustainable packaging solutions, however most of them remain at lab-scale and need validation. Customised approaches that consider the different socio-economic and cultural realities of African countries can help overcome current limitations of local packaging system, especially through collaboration between academia, industry and policy makers. • Plastic waste in Africa poses environmental/health risks due to inadequate disposal • Tunisia, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania act on plastic use and pollution, but gaps remain • The vast natural African resources are promising for bio-based materials production

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