The argument for plastic packaging in food has long rested on cost. A study commissioned by the American Consumer Institute found that removing plastic packaging from common grocery items could raise the average shopping trip by 21.6%. That means roughly $60 more per visit for customers. Milk alone would rise more than 30%; some beverages over 50%.
Plastic keeps those costs down because it protects food cheaply, extends shelf life, and weighs little compared to glass or metal. Eliminating it isn't a serious option. The environmental footprint of the extra food waste would be bigger than the footprint of the plastic packaging itself.
Plastic does have a problem of its own, though: what happens after the food is gone. Critics are right to object to plastic that's used once and then thrown out. PET already gets recycled back into food packaging, the kind of circular system the industry has been working toward. HDPE doesn’t yet.
PET, the clear plastic in beverage bottles, has a well-established food-grade recycling pathway. Bottle-to-bottle PET recycling is now routine in the U.S. and Europe, the product of decades of investment in collection, sorting, and processing.
HDPE has been a tougher problem, because its applications are more varied. The same material is used in packaging for milk, detergent, shampoo, and motor oil, and that makes contamination harder to control. An HDPE bottle that held motor oil for months can absorb compounds into the polymer matrix that simple washing won't remove. In a mixed recycling stream, those contaminants travel with the resin into whatever the recycled HDPE becomes next.
Additionally, HDPE’s color and opacity make optical sorting less precise. And FDA approval for recycled HDPE in food-contact applications has been narrow, requiring processors to demonstrate that recycled material meets the same safety thresholds as virgin plastic. The result is a recycled HDPE market that mostly serves non-food uses. Recovered material gets a second life as drainage pipe or industrial pallets, rarely as something that touches food.
For years, food-grade recycled HDPE looked like a permanent limitation. A few overlapping shifts have changed that.
Regulation is moving on both sides of the Atlantic. The FDA's letter of no objection process, which is the gateway for recycled plastic in food-contact applications, has issued a growing number of approvals for HDPE-relevant recycling technologies in recent years. Europe is moving faster. The EU's Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation requires minimum recycled-content levels in plastic packaging starting later this decade, with the thresholds tightening through 2030 and beyond. Food-contact packaging is included, with phased requirements that ramp over time.
Advances in solvent-based purification, super-clean wash systems, and chemical recycling that depolymerizes and reforms the resin are starting to remove those contaminants reliably enough for food contact. Chemical recycling in particular gets HDPE to a virgin-equivalent quality, which is what FDA approval typically requires.
Major consumer brands including PepsiCo, Unilever, Nestlé, and Procter & Gamble have published recycled-content goals across their plastic packaging portfolios. Those commitments mean buyers exist for recycled HDPE where none did before.
Things are starting to change. Investment in advanced sorting, decontamination, and polymer processing is pushing food-grade recycled HDPE closer to commercial viability. ALPLA, for example, has launched a dedicated recycling operation in the Netherlands built around a new process for producing food-grade recycled HDPE, one sign that the technical and regulatory barriers are starting to come down.
Similar work is underway across the industry. Packaging manufacturers, recyclers, and brand owners are investing in the systems needed to bring HDPE back into food applications at scale. None of it is fully solved yet, but the direction is clear: food-grade recycled HDPE is being treated as a problem with an answer.
A processing breakthrough alone isn’t enough. Three things also have to happen.
Collection infrastructure has to catch up. Recycled HDPE only matters if used containers reach the recycling stream in the first place. In much of the U.S., HDPE collection is uneven and contamination rates are high.
Design has to support recovery. Multi-material packaging, mixed-color HDPE, and labeling that confuses sorters all make recovery harder. Packaging built from the start to be recycled performs better in the systems we have today. That includes single-material structures, clearer labels, and simpler formats.
Demand has to keep pulling material through. Recycled content commitments from food and beverage brands turn collected plastic into market value. Without that pull, recyclers don’t have a buyer.
The case for plastic packaging has always rested on what it does at the point of use: keeping food safe, fresh, affordable, and within reach. That case is still true, and the consumer cost numbers underscore how much we depend on it. But the case is incomplete without an answer for what happens to the plastic afterward.
Food-grade recycled HDPE has been missing from food packaging recycling for decades. The technical, regulatory, and infrastructure pieces never lined up at once. They're lining up now. Building food-grade recycled HDPE at scale would do something the industry has been promising for years: make circular packaging real for one of the most common food-contact plastics in the world.