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Home Analysis

Packaging policy is not one-size-fits-all

byDan Felton, president and CEO, Flexible Packaging Association
June 1, 2026
in Analysis, Opinion, Plastics
Packaging policy is not one-size-fits-all

Kreminska / Shutterstock

Across the United States, policymakers are increasingly focused on packaging policy as they work to reduce waste, improve recycling, and advance sustainability goals. These are important objectives, and the flexible packaging industry shares them. 

However, as legislative and regulatory activity accelerates, there is a growing risk that well-intentioned policies may adopt a one-size-fits-all approach that does not reflect how packaging functions in the real world. 

Packaging is not a single product category. It is a complex, performance-driven system that protects goods, preserves resources, and enables modern supply chains. When policy treats all packaging the same without considering differences in product protection, performance requirements, and lifecycle impacts, it can unintentionally increase costs, create new environmental burdens, and limit opportunities for innovation. 

Flexible packaging plays many different roles 

Flexible packaging serves a wide range of industries and applications across the economy. From food and beverages to pharmaceuticals, industrial products, and household goods, flexible packaging materials are designed to meet a wide range of needs. 

For food products, packaging must often provide advanced barrier protection against oxygen, moisture, or light to maintain freshness and prevent spoilage. In medical and pharmaceutical applications, sterility and safety standards are critical. Industrial and consumer products may require durability, puncture resistance, or chemical compatibility to ensure safe transport and storage. 

Because these requirements differ significantly across sectors, packaging solutions are engineered for specific uses. A pouch used for shelf-stable food cannot be regulated in the same way as sterile medical packaging, just as industrial transport packaging serves different purposes than consumer retail packaging. 

Flexible packaging is a major US manufacturing sector  

Flexible packaging is not a niche industry. It represents approximately 21 percent of the $213 billion U.S. packaging market, making it one of the largest packaging segments in the country. 

In economic terms, the sector represents $51.5 billion within the US manufacturing industry that supports nearly 100,000 jobs and a broad supply chain that includes material suppliers, converters, equipment manufacturers and brand partners. 

The industry is also projected to grow significantly by 2030. This growth reflects continued demand for flexible packaging solutions that improve efficiency, reduce transportation emissions through lightweighting, and better protect products throughout the supply chain. 

When lawmakers create packaging rules, they impact both the environment and a large part of American manufacturing. 

Material-specific mandates can create unintended tradeoffs  

Many policy discussions today, including those involving extended producer responsibility (EPR), material bans, and minimum recycled content requirements, are often framed around specific materials rather than packaging performance.  

While these policies aim to address waste challenges, material-specific mandates can create unintended consequences. 

For example, replacing one material with another may increase packaging weight, raising transportation emissions, and energy use. In other cases, changes in materials can shorten product shelf life, leading to increased food waste. The environmental impact of wasted food can far exceed that of the packaging itself. 

Packaging design decisions are typically the result of careful engineering tradeoffs that balance protection, sustainability, cost and manufacturability. Policies that mandate specific materials without considering these tradeoffs risk shifting environmental impacts rather than reducing them. 

Outcome-based policy encourages innovation 

A more effective approach is an outcome-based policy that focuses on measurable environmental goals rather than prescribing specific materials or formats. 

Outcome-based frameworks allow manufacturers to innovate while still meeting policy objectives. They recognize that multiple packaging solutions can achieve similar sustainability outcomes through different pathways, including lightweighting, improved product protection, recyclability and emerging recovery technologies. 

This approach also allows industry to scale solutions more quickly because companies can adapt technologies and designs across diverse product categories rather than being constrained by rigid material mandates. 

Policy should reflect system realities 

Several current policy discussions highlight the importance of this approach. 

Packaging EPR laws are expanding across multiple states. As these programs develop, it will be important to ensure they account for packaging performance, lifecycle impacts, and differences in product protection requirements. 

Material bans should also be evaluated carefully to ensure they do not unintentionally increase environmental impacts elsewhere in the system. 

At the federal level, policymakers are exploring opportunities for greater harmonization between federal and state labeling regulations, as well as stronger regulatory impact reviews that analyze economic and environmental tradeoffs before new rules are implemented. 

These conversations represent an opportunity to build policy frameworks that work across the full packaging ecosystem. 

Why this matters 

Policy decisions affecting packaging shape how products are protected, transported and delivered across the entire economy. The stakes include environmental outcomes, consumer costs, supply chain resilience and continued manufacturing investment in the United States. 

For that reason, packaging policy should reflect real-world systems and performance requirements rather than simplified assumptions about materials. 

If policymakers focus on outcomes such as reducing waste, improving recovery systems, and encouraging innovation, they can create regulatory frameworks that support both environmental progress and economic growth. 

Flexible packaging is an essential part of modern life. 

Tags: Film & FlexiblesLegislation & Enforcement
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Dan Felton, president and CEO, Flexible Packaging Association

Dan Felton, president and CEO, Flexible Packaging Association

A well-known leader in the government affairs arena for more than 20 years, and currently president and CEO of the Flexible Packaging Association, Dan Felton has worked within the bottled water, credit card, healthcare and information management industries. He is particularly passionate about environmental, sustainability and packaging issues and has lobbied extensively in those areas at the state and federal levels.

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