Author
Listed:
- Alina Siebler
(Sustainable Packaging Institute SPI, Faculty of Life Sciences, Albstadt-Sigmaringen University, Anton-Guenther-Strasse 51, 72488 Sigmaringen, Germany)
- Jonas Keller
(Department Life Cycle Engineering, Institute for Acoustics and Building Physics (IABP), University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 7, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany)
- Mara Strenger
(Sustainable Packaging Institute SPI, Faculty of Life Sciences, Albstadt-Sigmaringen University, Anton-Guenther-Strasse 51, 72488 Sigmaringen, Germany)
- Tim Prescher
(Department Life Cycle Engineering, Institute for Acoustics and Building Physics (IABP), University of Stuttgart, Pfaffenwaldring 7, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany)
- Stefan Albrecht
(Department Life Cycle Engineering, Fraunhofer Institute for Building Physics IBP, Nobelstrasse 12, 70569 Stuttgart, Germany)
- Markus Schmid
(Sustainable Packaging Institute SPI, Faculty of Life Sciences, Albstadt-Sigmaringen University, Anton-Guenther-Strasse 51, 72488 Sigmaringen, Germany)
Abstract
As food typically accounts for substantially higher resource use and potential environmental impacts than its packaging, packaging-related food wastage must be considered in environmental assessments of food packaging. However, this is not currently performed as standard in Life Cycle Assessment (LCA). This article proposes a conceptual framework as an approach to systematically integrating packaging functionality into LCA by incorporating packaging-related food wastage depending on shelf-life and due to technical emptiability. Based on literature data, a segmented non-linear regression is proposed to estimate shelf-life-dependent food wastage at retail level. Two exponential models provide a consistently decreasing relationship between shelf-life and food wastage, with S = 0.064 for products with ≤30 days shelf-life and S = 0.036 for >30 days shelf-life. These values indicate a satisfactory internal fit within both shelf-life segments. In addition, established experimental procedures for quantifying packaging emptiability are integrated to capture further packaging-related food wastage. The approach yields a pragmatic estimation of packaging-related food wastage that can be operationalized in packaging LCAs. Rather than predicting exact amounts of food wastage, the framework enables a more holistic, function-oriented assessment of food packaging by making environmental trade-offs between packaging design, shelf-life effects and emptiability transparent for screening-level LCA.
Suggested Citation
Alina Siebler & Jonas Keller & Mara Strenger & Tim Prescher & Stefan Albrecht & Markus Schmid, 2026.
"Function Meets Environment–Approach for the Environmental Assessment of Food Packaging, Taking into Account Packaging Functionality,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(3), pages 1-26, January.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:3:p:1222-:d:1848726
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