By choosing 100% recycled, food-grade packaging, we’re helping reduce waste and carbon impact while helping to keep plastics and other recyclable materials in use and not in oceans or landfills.

Responsible Sourcing and Production

We partner with suppliers who share our environmental standards

100% Recycled Packaging

100% post-consumer recycled aluminum and plastic, responsibly managed facilities.

Food-Grade Certified Packaging

Highest standards for beverages and approved for direct food contact.

Circular Design

Designed to be collected, recycled, and reused again and again.

Large pile of discarded plastics with a cloudy sky in the background

The Global Plastic Problem

Every year, the world produces over 400 million tons of plastic, and less than 10% is ever recycled [1]. The rest ends up in landfills, incinerators, or the ocean, where it can take hundreds of years to break down, releasing microplastics and toxins along the way [1, 2].

Every new package adds to a growing problem: more waste, more emissions, more materials that could’ve been reused instead of remade. At IMPAC+, our goal is to take charge in this narrative by turning existing used materials back into quality packaging.

Close-up of PET plastics on a light gray background

Our Solution: 100% Recycled, Food-Grade Packaging

We package with 100% recycled, food-grade materials, including recycled aluminum and recycled plastics. These materials use require energy to produce and generates fewer greenhouse gas emissions across its life cycle compared to their newly made counterparts [1, 3].

Such recycled packaging is already used in many consumer and industrial applications, from hydration sticks to beverage bottles and textile fibers, proving that these materials can be durable, scalable, and functional [4].

Every IMPAC+ package is fully recyclable and made to be part of a closed-loop system, where used materials are collected, reprocessed, and reborn as new packaging, reducing waste and keeping plastic and other recyclable materials out of landfills and oceans.

References

  1. Houssini, K., Li, J., & Tan, Q. (2025). Complexities of the global plastics supply chain revealed in a trade-linked material flow analysis. Communications Earth & Environment, 6, Article 257. https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02169-5
  2. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (2025, May 15). Impacts of plastic pollution. https://www.epa.gov/plastics/impacts-plastic-pollution
  3. The Aluminum Association (2024). Aluminum Agenda: Recycling Overview. https://www.aluminum.org/sites/default/files/2024-05/2024-Agenda_Recycling-Overview.pdf
  4. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). (2020, October 5). Recycled plastics in food packaging. https://www.fda.gov/food/packaging-food-contact-substances-fcs/recycled-plastics-food-packaging