Innovation and sustainability were the key topics addressed by speakers at this years Technical Seminar organized by the European association promoting the interests of self-adhesive labeling, FINAT. This biennial meeting of minds, held this year in March in Barcelona, brings together the entire value chain of the European self-adhesive label industry, and represents a powerful opportunity for everyone from raw material supplier to brand owner/end user to identify issues and pinpoint possible new directions for self-adhesive labels.
A history of labeling covering all types of label and substrate, including early cans and wine bottles, set the scene for an examination of the self-adhesive labels relatively-short 77-year history, during which this technology has become a top provider of product identification and decoration. In the medium term, future growth for self-adhesive labels is predicted to be greatest in the food and beverage sectors, and in logistics and transport applications - with the emerging economies representing the most dynamic marketplaces.
However, today, self-adhesive labeling is facing increasing competition from alternative technologies in both its main marketplaces: primary product labels and logistics/variable information print. As well as these challenges, the industry is facing continuing high costs for key polymers, adhesives, and chemicals; environmental and sustainability issues; value chain complexity; and fragmentation at label converter level, creating margin pressures (there are 10,000 label converters worldwide). Narrow-web self-adhesive label converters are therefore expanding their product offering to include sleeves and flexible packaging - creating change and opportunity in the supply chain.
Regulatory issues impact the label industry, with its extended value chain and the complex structure of the self-adhesive label sandwich of facestock, adhesive, and release liner. Developments in REACH, the European chemicals legislation, were discussed. FINAT is part of the CHEMI platform for downstream chemical users, and sees as its overall role in relation to REACH to keep track of changes, influence where necessary, and communicate to the FINAT membership.
The same is true of food safety -- particularly in relation to packaging inks and their migration - and here there is increasing evidence of country-specific measures, that may set a precedent for pan-European legislation. The seminar agenda covered best practice in making a choice of printing ink. This was said to be for the packaging supply chain to work together to ensure the best possible environmental footprint, without compromising product performance.
Printing technology for labels is indeed evolving and innovating. Lean manufacturing is a major feature of industry philosophy today, bringing significant benefits in the elimination of waste, faster changeovers, and improved productivity. There is also growing evidence of partnerships between traditional printing technologies like flexo with digital label printing. Used together, they can deliver, for brand owners, a cost-effective answer for todays shorter print runs and product multi-versioning. In one particular area, it was predicted that, in just five years, 75% of 100,000-label print runs or under will be run digitally: the durable life-of-the-product labels extensively used in automotive, electronics, appliances, and other industries for safety markings on components, and making stringent demands on the label substrate and adhesive.
Pre-press, workflow technologies, and platemaking -- including the new HD flexo digital platemaking process -- and the requirements of new media such as mobile phone apps and QR codes; the challenges and solutions for achieving excellence in kiss-diecutting of thin film release liners; UV LED ink curing (a new technology that will replace the traditional arc lamp).
The actual label substrate itself may be paper or film - with film face and liner stocks currently gaining market share. Bioplastics - which may be biobased, biodegradable or both - were said to be a real future opportunity area for labels. Already widely used in flexible packaging, replacing traditional plastic films, they are also gaining acceptance with leading brand owners for labels because of their extensive environmental and end-of-life benefits, applied performance, and high consumer acceptance. There is much other activity in the development of film facestocks and release base; and future projects in PET production were said to include rPET featuring post-consumer recycled content; flame-retardant UL-compliant films; and antimony-free films.
Adhesives partly based on renewable materials are also already offered on self-adhesive labels; and to meet the needs of brand owners, solutions for label separation from the container are also currently available, custom-tailored to specific needs.
Recycling, and the recyclability of self-adhesive label components, are an area where FINAT is extremely active and had much to report and discuss. A signatory to the European Declaration on Paper Recovery and a participant in the Consumer Goods Forums Global Packaging Project (GPP) FINAT has established a recycling project group, and is actively promoting and raising the awareness of the importance of recycling for the label industry, as well as positively demonstrating the suitability of siliconised paper and film liner for recycling. The GPP has identified strategic and organizational implications for the packaging supply chain, as well as a common sustainability language. Bringing together the worlds leading brand owners, retailers, packaging manufacturers, and professional associations, the GPPS - Global Protocol on Packaging Sustainability -- is today an accepted framework for informed debate on sustainability concerns throughout the supply chain.
The recycling and re-use of siliconised release liner is the self-adhesive label industrys first-line concern in the recycling arena, and the subject of much activity. The seminar also looked at the topic of the current resurgence in the use of linerless labels - both for their environmental credentials, and as a specialist technology for retail priceweigh food prepacks complementing mainstream labeling.
Overall, the message was that the self-adhesive label industry must continue to innovate to meet brand owners needs because it is the
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