Life in Plastic

CleanHub

The interview podcast with and for circular economy practitioners, waste managers, material scientists. This is about the lessons learned from driving a more circular future.

  1. VOR 3 TAGEN

    PPWR Explained: What Changes For Brands & Producers Neirin Jones?

    The Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR) is a groundbreaking, first-of-its-kind regulation in the European Union that is set to fundamentally change the packaging industry globally. In this episode, we sit down with industry expert Neirin Jones to discuss how this law impacts brands, producers, and retailers both inside and outside the EU. What You’ll Learn: The Shift from Directive to Regulation: Unlike previous directives that allowed for individual interpretation by member states, the PPWR is a harmonized law that applies uniformly across the entire EU. Beyond EPR: While Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) focuses on downstream waste management, the PPWR targets the upstream value chain, including product design, recyclability, and the use of minimum recycled content. New Compliance Standards: Learn why businesses can no longer "pay their way out" of compliance and must instead focus on removing "forever chemicals" (PFAS) and ensuring packaging is recyclable at scale. Critical Deadlines: Understand the transition period ending on August 12, 2026, by which time companies must be fully compliant with new standards or risk severe penalties and sales bans. Global Supply Chain Impact: How international manufacturers and recyclers—from China to India—must adapt to meet strict EU supply chain due diligence and recycled content targets. Actionable Next Steps: Expert Neirin's advice on conducting a product portfolio stock-take, finding the right data management partners, and utilizing AI to navigate complex regulatory requirements. Whether you are a B2C brand owner, a manufacturer, or an international distributor, this episode provides the essential roadmap for navigating the new era of circular economy regulations in Europe. Connect with Neirin Jones: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/neirinjones/ Email: neirin@rainbow.ventures Company: Rainbow Ventures, a venture studio building circular economy innovations.

    40 Min.
  2. 6. MAI

    The Largest Plastic Pollution Initiative (You Probably Haven't Heard About) | Inside GPAP

    Tackling Plastic Pollution at a Global Scale | Clemence Schmid on GPAPIn this episode, we dive into the Global Plastic Action Partnership (GPAP), the world’s largest initiative tackling plastic pollution, currently covering 20% of the global population. Convened by the World Economic Forum, GPAP brings together governments, the private sector, academia, and civil society to create actionable national roadmaps and drive global solutions, including the ongoing negotiations for a global plastic treaty.GuestClemence Schmid shares her insights from working across multinational corporations, startups, and multistakeholder platforms, offering lessons on scaling operations, innovation, and implementing circular economy principles.In this episode, you’ll learn about:How GPAP uses evidence-based mapping to track plastic flow from production to end-of-lifeThe power of multi-stakeholder collaboration to drive systemic changeChallenges in including smaller, local businesses in global initiativesHow circular economy strategies turn waste into economic opportunityThe current status of the global plastic treaty and what’s next for 2026–2027Why it matters: GPAP not only helps prevent plastic from polluting oceans and landscapes—it also fosters local industry, creates jobs, and strengthens resilient supply chains worldwide.Resources & links mentioned in the episode:World Economic Forum; Global Plastic Action PartnershipIntergovernmental Negotiating Committee (INC) for a global plastic treatyDon’t forget to subscribe for more conversations on plastic pollution, circular economy, and global sustainability initiatives!#PlasticPollution #GPAP #CircularEconomy #Sustainability #OceanConservation #PlasticFree #GlobalPlasticAction #WasteManagement #ClimateAction #SustainableBusiness

    33 Min.
  3. 29. APR.

    How to Communicate Your Sustainability Message | Marketing Advisor Thomas Kolster Explains

    Every brand spent the last decade claiming they were saving the planet. Consumers stopped believing them. Long story short: Consumer trust in sustainability messaging is at an all-time low. After a decade of brands positioning themselves as planet-savers, greenwashing scandals, and purpose claims that didn't hold up to scrutiny, most consumers have tuned out and most brands have followed by going quiet. But the problems haven't gone away. The regulations are still coming. The plastic is still in the oceans. And the brands that figure out how to communicate authentically right now will have the space almost entirely to themselves. In this episode of Life in Plastic, host Joel Tasche sits down with Thomas Kolster, author of 'The Hero Trap' and one of the earliest voices to call the sustainability backlash before it hit. Together they dig into why purpose-led marketing failed, what brands in the CPG and consumer goods space should be saying instead, and why 2026 might be the best moment in years to establish your brand as a credible voice in this space. What you'll learn in this episode: - Why "purpose-led" marketing eroded consumer trust and what the Hero Trap actually is - The 39% gap between sustainable intent and purchase behavior, and how to close it - Why marketing and sustainability operate like two different planets and how to bridge them - The one question every brand needs to answer before communicating their impact - Why most of your competitors going silent right now is the biggest opening you've had in years - How to shift from "look at what we're doing" to "here's who we can help you become" About Thomas Kolster Thomas Kolster is a Copenhagen-based marketing activist, author, and speaker who has spent two decades working at the intersection of sustainability and brand strategy. He is the author of Goodvertising and The Hero Trap, and has advised brands, nonprofits, and governments across more than 60 countries. He is widely recognized as one of the first voices to publicly challenge the purpose-washing trend in mainstream marketing.

    48 Min.
  4. 22. APR.

    The Packaging Dilemma Cosmetics Brands Face with Dan Coppins

    in this episode, host Joel Tasche sits down with packaging technologist Dan Coppins to unpack the reality behind “sustainable packaging” in the cosmetics industry, and why it’s far more complex than most founders expect. Together, they break down the core framework of packaging—the Three Ps: Protect, Preserve, Promote, and explain why sustainability can’t be separated from product performance, branding, and real-world logistics. From plastic and paper to glass and aluminum, this conversation dives into the trade-offs behind every material choice. The takeaway? There is no perfect solution, only informed decisions based on your product, your brand, and your long-term strategy. You’ll also learn practical design strategies to improve recyclability, including why monomaterial packaging matters, how color choices impact recycling, and what innovations are changing the game. For early-stage brands, Dan shares grounded advice on navigating high MOQs, starting with stock packaging, and treating sustainability as an evolving journey—not an overnight fix. If you’re building a consumer brand and want to make smarter, more honest packaging decisions, this episode is a must-listen. Topics covered: The Three Ps: Protect, Preserve, PromoteThe truth about “sustainable” materialsPlastic vs. glass vs. paper vs. aluminumDesigning for recyclabilityPractical advice for small and growing brands

    1 Std. 6 Min.
  5. 15. APR.

    One Packaging Law Could Get You Banned From Selling in California with Caroline Deloach

    Sustainable Packaging Explained: EPR, Consumer Behavior & The Future of Packaging What does truly sustainable packaging look like, and why is it so complicated? In this episode, we sit down with Caroline Deloach, Director of Sustainability at Atlantic Packaging, to unpack the reality behind plastic, recycling, and the future of packaging in the U.S. From the “say-do gap” in consumer behavior to the rise of Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) laws, this conversation breaks down the trade-offs, challenges, and real solutions shaping the packaging industry today. 💡 What You’ll Learn in This Episode: Why sustainable packaging depends on the specific use case (especially in food)The truth behind the “say-do gap”—why consumers say one thing but buy anotherWhy there is no silver bullet material (and the trade-offs of plastic vs. paper)The challenges of compostable packaging and limited infrastructureHow Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) is transforming the industryWhy brands may face fines up to $25,000/day for non-complianceWhich U.S. states are already implementing EPR lawsHow companies like Atlantic Packaging are driving real, practical change 🌊 Why This Matters Packaging sits at the center of the plastic pollution crisis, but solving it isn’t as simple as switching materials. This episode dives into the economic, environmental, and behavioral realities behind packaging decisions, and what it will take to move toward a circular economy. 🔔 Subscribe for more conversations on sustainability, plastic pollution, circular economy, and real-world solutions.

    59 Min.
  6. 27. MÄRZ

    EmpCo Explained: The New Risks for Brands Making Environmental Claims from September 2026 | Christina Kufer

    Disclaimer: The conversation was originally recorded in German. We dubbed it with AI to make it accessible to non-German speakers. And since we're discussing legal topics, please be extra careful. If you have any doubts regarding translations or content, please reach out to us. Green Claims & Greenwashing: Why “Climate Neutral” and “Sustainable” Will Be Banned from September (with Christina Kufer)From September onwards, everything changes for sustainable brands. The EU is getting serious in the fight against greenwashing. Terms like “sustainable,” “eco-friendly,” or “climate neutral” will be blacklisted if they are not backed up with solid, verifiable evidence.In this episode, I talk to lawyer Christina Kufer about the Empowering Consumers Directive (EmpCo) and the Green Claims Directive. We explain why almost all generic environmental claims will soon be legally challengeable, what will happen to self-created product labels, and why the term “climate neutral” on packaging will soon be a thing of the past.Christina gives practical advice on what founders and marketing teams need to do now to avoid legal warnings and penalties.In this episode, you’ll learn:The difference: What distinguishes the Empowering Consumers Directive from the Green Claims Directive?The “sustainable” ban: Why generic terms like “sustainable” or “eco-friendly” will soon be illegal without certification.Label chaos: Why self-made environmental icons and logos will be banned — and which third-party certifications will still be allowed.Climate neutrality: Why CO₂ offsetting can no longer be advertised as “climate neutral” (and the difference between product and corporate claims).Future claims: What strict rules apply if you say: “We will be net zero by 2030.”Legal risk: What happens when the lawyer’s letter arrives (cease-and-desist letter, injunction, sales ban, sell-off periods).

    51 Min.

Info

The interview podcast with and for circular economy practitioners, waste managers, material scientists. This is about the lessons learned from driving a more circular future.