Abstract:
In the recent past, packaging is considered as one of the most vital functions in the
product distribution owing to the worldwide customer base and product security.
Nonetheless, augmented packaging, packaging only for marketing; most of the time, the
secondary packaging fetches numerous embedded negative issues especially in terms of
environment throughout its life cycle; from raw material extraction to disposal stage.
Identifying and quantifying such alarms would rope in mitigating the impacts in a
significant proportion. Life Cycle Assessment is one of the best tools for achieving this
purpose and in attaining defined intentions in this study. The main objective of the study
is to quantify the adverse environmental impact of the 400g full cream milk powder
carton throughout its lifecycle in the Sri Lankan context. Apart from that, the study
compared the environmental impact of the end disposal scenarios with landfilling and
recycling and quantifying the monetary saving that goes parallel with environmental
saving; it further engaged focusing on the avoidance of the secondary packaging with
reference to milk powder carton. A cradle to grave analysis was carried out with the
declared unit of one milk powder carton which is 30g of weight. Questionnaires,
databases, interviews, literature reviews were useful in data collection for accomplishing
the defined objectives. The methodology has followed ISO 14040 and ISO 14044.The
SimaPro faculty version was used as the tool for analyzing the life cycle impact and
ReCiPe 2016 is the characterization model used for generating midpoint impact
categories and endpoint damage categories. The resulted major characterized figures are
0.431 kg1,4-DCB for terrestrial ecotoxicity, 0.417 kg 1,4-DCB for human noncarcinogenic toxicity, 0.146 kg CO2eq for global warming, 0.053m2a crop eq for land
use and 0.036 kg oil eq for fossil resource scarcity per milk powder carton. From two
disposal scenarios considered, recycling and landfilling results suggest that proper
recycling would reduce the damage on the environment in a considerable proportion. If
milk powder secondary packaging are eliminated from Sri Lanka, the resulting
characterized the end point damage savings as 93.57 DALY (human health), 1,839,960
USD 2013 (resources) and 0.205 species yr (ecosystems). In monetary terms, a consumer
saves Rs. 1.5 billion and manufacturers can have a cost reduction of Rs. 1.2 billion
annually. Considering the results, it is recommended to follow proper recycling as endof-life treatment and practicing a minimalist approach with possible products is the best
way to minimize the total impact. As per the further recommendations for research it is
suggested to quantify the direct and indirect benefit that a manufacturer and a consumer
receive by practicing minimal secondary packaging for products.