Disposable food packaging

Molded pulp drink carrier
Biodegradable plastic utensils
A single-serving packet of butter
Fish and Chips: wrapped in wax paper then with used newspaper, packets of condiments

Disposable food packaging comprises disposable items often found in fast food restaurants, takeout restaurants and kiosks, and catering establishments. Food serving items for picnics and parties is very similar. Typical disposable foodservice products are plates, bowls, cups, utensils, doilies and tray papers. These products can be made from a number of materials including plastics, paper, bio-resins and bamboo.

Packaging of fast food and take-out food is necessary for the customer but involves a significant amount of material that ends up in landfill, recycling, composting, or litter.[1]

History

The paper plate was invented by the German bookbinder Hermann Henschel in Luckenwalde in 1867.

In 1908, Dr. Samuel J. Crumbine[2] was a public health officer in Kansas. He was on a train when he witnessed one of his tuberculosis patients taking a drink of water from a common dipper and water bucket (a publicly shared way of drinking water) in the car. Right behind his patient was a young girl who drank from the same dipper and bucket. This inspired him to launch a crusade to ban publicly shared or common utensils in public places. Taking note of the trend Lawrence Luellen and Hugh Moore invented a disposable paper cup called the "Health Cup" and later renamed the "Dixie Cup".[3][4]

Single-use cone cups were followed the by commercialization of single-use plates and bowls, wooden cutlery, and paper food wraps. By the 1930s these products were widely used to feed the men and women who worked on the remote dams, bridges and roads of the Works Progress Administration. In the 1940s they were used to feed defense factory workers.[5]

After World War II, foodservice packaging materials like plastic and polystyrene foam were developed. The unique properties of these materials (insulation and weight reduction) and their ability to be made into a variety of shapes and sizes, provided foodservice operators, and consumers, with a wider variety of packaging choices.[5]

A major development in disposable foodservice packaging happened in 1948 when the newly founded McDonald's Restaurant closed its doors to revamp its menu. Along with changing their menu items, the restaurant wanted to change the way it handled dishwashing and dishwashers, car hops and wait staff, and storage, breakage and (customer) theft of table ware. When the McDonald's re-opened their restaurant six months later, their meals were no longer served with the use of glasses, plates or cutlery, and would be taken away from the restaurant by the customers.[5]

Sanitation

The use of disposable foodservice packaging is a step toward preventing foodborne disease. By being used only once, these products significantly reduce food contamination and the spread of diseases.[6]

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Food Code authoritatively spells out the sanitary and health advantages of single-use foodservice packaging: "A food establishment without facilities...for cleaning and sanitizing kitchenware and tableware shall provide only single-use kitchenware, single-service articles, and single-use articles for use by food employees and single-service articles for use by consumers." The Food Code further states "in situations in which the reuse of multiuse items could result in foodborne illness to consumers, single-service and single-use articles must be used to ensure safety."[6]

Materials used

Insulated paper cup for hot drinks, cut away to show air layer
Rice in a paperboard oyster pail

disposable foodservice packaging can be made from a number of materials each with its own uses and benefits.

Aluminum

Aluminum is used to manufacture foils, wraps, bags, containers, and trays.

Plastics

Many disposable foodservice products can be made of plastic: cups, plates, bowls, trays, food containers and cutlery, for example. Plastics are used because the material is lightweight and holds the temperature of hot/cold food and beverages. Polystyrene is in one of the most common types of plastics used for foodservice packaging. In its foamed form, expanded polystyrene is often sometimes referred to as Styrofoam. Non-foarmed polystyrene is sometimes also used for utensils or plastic plates. Polyethylene and other plastics are also used.

Plastic wrap is sometimes used to cover a tray of food.

Many plastics are marked with the SPI recycling codes for identification.

Paper and paperboard
Paperboard clamshell for fast food

Disposable foodservice products made from paper, paperboard, and corrugated fiberboard: including cups, plates, bowls, napkins, carryout bags, trays, egg cartons, doilies and tray liners. Some paper products are coated or treated to improve wet strength or grease resistance.

Molded pulp products are made from recycled newsprint and are formed under heat and pressure into plates, bowls, trays and cup carriers. Molded pulp is readily recyclable.

Alternative materials

A number of manufacturers are now making disposable foodservice products from a combination of natural starches, recycled fibers, water, air, and natural minerals.[7] These composite products include cups, plates, bowls, cutlery, sandwich wraps, food containers and trays.

The material used to make these kinds of disposable foodservice products is primarily PLA or polylactic acid. Some products are made from a mixture of PLA and pulp fibers that are molded into disposable foodservice items with heat and pressure. Others are made from a composite or mixture of starch and other materials, such as limestone and recycled fibers, to give them additional strength.[7]

Cost

By reducing the need for equipment and additional labor, disposable foodservice packaging is an economical alternative to multiuse items and eliminates the need for dishwashers and other support equipment (racks, carts, dollies, shelving, bins) It can also save money on water and energy used by dishwashers and can eliminates the need to replace reusables that are broken, damaged, stolen or accidentally discarded.[8]

Environmental concerns

Coffee cup sleeve on a coffee cup, sleeve makes it easy to hold hot drinks.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, paper and plastic foodservice packaging discarded in the country’s municipal solid waste stream accounted 1.3 percent in 2007 (by weight) of municipal solid waste.[9] The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency also says that an often-cited waste prevention measure is the use of washable plates, cups, napkins … instead of the disposables variety. (This will reduce solid waste but will have other environmental effects, such as increased water and energy use.)

Litter composition studies conducted in many states across the country have found that foodservice packaging items make up 1.4 percent of our nation’s litter stream.[10]

Collection costs, the value of scrap material, and increased energy expenditures create an additional economic barrier to recycling foodservice packaging. While recycling foodservice packaging is difficult, recycled materials are being used in some foodservice packaging.

Improved environmental footprint

Many people are working on improving the environmental footprint of packaging for food service. Often a Life-cycle assessment is valuable to determine the effects throughout the entire system. Some actions include:

Notes

  1. > Reducing Wasted Food & Packaging: A Guide for Food Services and Restaurants (PDF), EPA-909-K-14-002, US Environmental Protection Agency, retrieved 9 Mar 2015
  2. "Dixie Cup Company History". Lafayette College Libraries. August 1995. Retrieved 2011-10-05.
  3. Food and Drink Quarterly, Vol 4 Issue 4, "Package Perfect" By John Burke
  4. 1 2 3 Foodservice Packaging Institute, "A Brief History of Foodservice Packaging", 2006
  5. 1 2 http://web.archive.org/web/20090327074554/http://www.foodsafety.gov:80/~dms/foodcode.html. Archived from the original on March 27, 2009. Retrieved March 23, 2009. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  6. 1 2 Foodservice Packaging Institute, "Single-Use Foodservice Packaging: A Tutorial", 2007
  7. Library
  8. Municipal Solid Waste | Wastes | US EPA
  9. Library
  10. [Biodetradable Products Institute http://www.bpiworld.org ]
  11. Dietz, C (February 2013), Compostable Products for Food Services (PDF), Eco-Cycle
  12. http://www.americanchemistry.com/s_plastics/sec_pfpg.asp?CID=1436&DID=5228

Books, General references

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