This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.
Frugalpac sells first paper bottling machine line to Canadian company
The world’s first paper bottle machine has been sold by UK-based company Frugalpac to the Canadian firm KinsBrae Packaging.
Frugalpac, which specialises in the Frugal bottle – a beverage bottle crafted from recycled paper – has said that the new bottling line can produce more than two and a half million bottles a year.
The sale, according to reports, marks the beginning of the company’s plans to “establish Frugal bottle production hubs around the world” and will also help to “reduce the carbon even further by reducing transportation costs and carbon miles,” said Frugalpac CEO Malcom Waugh.
Waugh explained: “The Frugal bottle is made from a paperboard shell which is 94% recycled paper and a food grade pouch inside to hold the liquid,” and revealed that prices will remain competitive to encourage more companies to buy lines in the future. He reiterated: “We will also offer our customers the lowest possible cost for the Frugal bottle” and “with the rising cost of glass production due to increased fossil fuel costs to make glass bottles, we are close to parity on the cost of our paper bottles against glass. If one invested in a Frugal bottle assembly machine, they would be at parity or below”.
Frugalpac has revealed that it has also received strong inquiries from 87 other global brands as well as contract packing and packaging companies interested in buying its bottle machines in the next few months.
“Now we’re asking other packaging companies, bottlers and co-packers to join our paper bottle revolution by investing in their own Frugal bottle machines,” said Waugh and added: “It is clear consumers are keen on more [environmentally] sustainable forms of packaging and this is a great opportunity for packaging companies, bottlers and the print industry.”
Related news
Bourgogne wine see global growth despite difficult market conditions