Borealis carries out reusable cup pilot project

Borealis carries out reusable cup pilot project


Borealis has completed a reusable cup pilot at K 2025, the trade fair for plastics and rubber, held at Germany-based trade centre Messe Düsseldorf.

The system was designed to address single-use waste and provide a model for circular practices at large gatherings.

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.


Find out more

The initiative provided 50,000 cups made from foamable polypropylene, which incorporated chemically recycled material produced through OMV’s ReOil technology.

The project featured collaboration with various partners in the value chain, including Bockatech, MCC Global IML, Faerch and ARBURG.

Throughout the event, attendees were served hot and cold beverages in these reusable cups across all restaurants, bars and food trucks on site. 

Additional distribution points included the Borealis and Borouge stand’s coffee corner, as well as the MCC Global IML stand. 

After use, they were collected in approximately 50 bins stationed throughout the venue, then cleaned and reintroduced for use throughout the event.

By the close of K 2025, most of the cups had been cycled through use, collection and cleaning.

Of the roughly 20,000 cups processed after the event, more than 4,000 were provided to local scout groups and smaller social initiatives in Düsseldorf. Nearly 15,000 cups were later donated to Diakonie Düsseldorf.

Distribution of these donations was managed with assistance from the marketing agency FORTESNICKEL.

Any remaining or damaged cups are being mechanically recycled at mtm plastics in Germany, part of the Borealis Group, to create new plastic feedstock.

Scout groups received their allocation of cups in November. The final batch of donations to Diakonie Düsseldorf took place at the end of December 2025.

Borealis application development and consumer products’ technical service manager Philip Knapen said: “We’re proud to have led this initiative in partnership with Messe Düsseldorf and our partners across the value chain.

“Together, we’ve shown that it’s possible to implement circular systems even in large, complex settings-and that collaboration is the key to making them work.”

Recently, Borealis to expand polypropylene production capacity at its Burghausen site in Germany.




Source link

Get Packaging Industry News updates

Get the most critical Packaging Industry news in your email each week.


We promise no spam email will send you.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles
The Coors Light ‘Tallerboy’ is Both Stupid and Wonderful
The Coors Light ‘Tallerboy’ is Both Stupid and Wonderful
Barbara RuckerJun 9, 2026

Dubbed the “Tallerboy,” Coors Light has released a limited-edition tallboy canister that will hold…

UFP Packaging and SUN Automation are Raising the Bar in Corrugated
UFP Packaging and SUN Automation are Raising the Bar in Corrugated
Barbara RuckerJun 9, 2026

UFP Packaging is on an ambitious path to scale its corrugated division. But growth…

PureCycle, Innovia Films Produce White, Cavitated BOPP Film Using Recycled PP
PureCycle, Innovia Films Produce White, Cavitated BOPP Film Using Recycled PP
Barbara RuckerJun 9, 2026

PureCycle Technologies, Inc. has announced the successful production and trial evaluation of white, cavitated…

Did Pirate’s Booty Just Walk the Plank With Its Latest Refresh?
Did Pirate’s Booty Just Walk the Plank With Its Latest Refresh?
Barbara RuckerJun 9, 2026

When a brand you’ve known since childhood decides to suddenly rebrand after decades of…