In an Australian first, Tip Top has announced a move to more sustainable packaging, releasing 100 per cent recycled and recyclable cardboard bread bag tags, designed to give you the same great Tip Top freshness.
Launching on South Australian shelves, the initiative will remove 11 million plastic bread tags from local waste streams by the end of 2021 and will eventually eliminate over 400 million plastic tags per year as they roll out nationally.
The transition to recyclable bread tags is the first of a series of packaging innovations under the Companyβs new vision, βFeeding Aussie families more sustainablyβ.
βOur goal is that by 2025, all Tip Top packaging will be 100 per cent recyclable, reusable or compostable to help close the loop,βΒ Graeme Cutler, director of sales and CSR Lead,Β Tip Top ANZ said.
βDeveloped and produced through rigorous testing, the new sustainable bread tags promise no compromise on freshness and taste. Customers can expect to be provided with the same Tip Top quality that millions of Australians enjoy freshly baked every day and have trusted since 1958.β
Tip Top encourages consumers to recycle their cardboard bread tags in kerbside recycling bins by tucking the tagΒ securelyΒ inside other paper or cardboard products,Β such as an envelope or paper bag, giving them the best chance of beingΒ recycledΒ into a new product ratherΒ than being sent to landfill.
Paul Klymenko, CEO of Planet Ark said, βSmall plastic items such as bread tags are problematic in the waste system. It is great to see this innovation by Tip Top in using 100 per cent recycled content which can then be recycled when placed in kerbside recycling correctly. It is pleasing to see circular economy thinking being applied as they are designing out problematic plastic waste and keeping resources in use.β
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