Blow molded food and beverage containers consumed over 5 billion lb of resin
in 2003, a figure that will surpass 6.2 billion lb by 2006, according to the recently
published Mastio blow molding market study. Plastic containers for liquid and
dry foods, water, carbonated soft drinks, juices, sports drinks, milk, water,
beer, and liquor will grow at a 6.2% average annual rate for the next three years.
Market trends
New bottle designs will help spur demand. For example, new sizes of milk containers
are on the horizon. Some dairies are manufacturing single-serve plastic bottles,
which are sold primarily in convenience stores and have seen as much as 100%
annual growth. Other recent product introductions include Ocean Sprays
new square juice bottle, designed to fit in a refrigerator door shelf, and Miller
Brewing Co.s PET beer bottle.
Amcor PET Packaging is developing smart packaging that incorporates
special features that enable it to be tracked through the supply chain. Indicators
can be built in to provide information on the freshness of the packaged product.
Heat-set technology and use of nitrogen gas have increased the ability to hot-fill
PET containers and extend the contents shelf life. Barrier technologies
have also made significant inroads in the beverage market. For example, packagers
are exploring use of oxygen-scavenging resins blended with PET for smaller single-serve
carbonated soft-drink bottles. And Plastipaks Actis plasma coating is
being used to extend shelf life while preserving flavor. In beverages, adoption
of barrier technology is highest for juices and teas.
Seven blow molders of food and beverage containers hold about 58% of the market.
They are, starting with the largest, Consolidated Container Co., Amcor PET Packaging
North America, Constar International, Southeastern Container, Owens-Illinois,
Plastipak Packaging, and Graham Packaging Co.
Uneven growth prospects
PET salad dressing and condiment containers are replacing glass and contribute
to 6.7% average annual growth for liquid food packaging. This sector should
reach over 1 billion lb by 2006. Dry food containers are growing at a similar
rate although this is the smallest sector of food containers. It will consume
an additional 31.7 million lb/yr, raising the level to 176.2 million lb by 2006.
Milk is the slowest growing beverage packaging sector (3.5%/yr) and will gain
only 111.3 million lb of additional resin consumption by 2006. At the same time,
water bottles will continue to increase dramatically from 729.6 million lb to
1.02 billion lb by 2006. This sector enjoys the highest average growth rate
of 11.7% annually. Juice and noncarbonated beverage bottles have slowed compared
to recent years and will grow an average of 7.1%/yr, adding 200.8 million lb
of resin demand over the next three years. Soft-drink packaging growth also
will lag behind recent years with only 4.2% annual growth, causing this market
to add only 206.2 million lb of PET resin consumption.
HDPE & PET dominate
The two major resins used in this market are HDPE and PET. Together, they account
for about 4.9 billion lb of food and beverage bottles. HDPE amounts to around
32% of the market or 1.6 billion lb/yr. PET represents around 66% or roughly
3.3 billion lb/yr. Annual consumption of HDPE in these containers is expected
to grow by 2.6%/yr to 224 million lb and PET will grow 3.7%/yr to 653 million
lb by 2006.
Mastio & Company, based in St. Joseph, Mo., is a consulting firm specializing in industrial-consumer opinion research and market trends in the plastics industry. For more information, call (816) 364-6200 or visit www.mastio.com/pt/outlook.html.