Trends in meat, poultry and seafood packaging

Food Pro­duc­tion Daily
By Rory Har­ring­ton, 04-May-2011

An ongo­ing shift to case ready pack­ag­ing and the growth of value-added fea­tures in packs are two fac­tors fore­cast to boost US demand for meat, poul­try and seafood pack­ag­ing to US$9.2bn by 2015, said a new report.

Mar­ket ana­lysts The Free­do­nia Group added that flex­i­ble pack­ag­ing growth would out­strip its rigid coun­ter­part — with gains bol­stered by increas­ing demands for high bar­rier films to pro­long shelf life. Added-value fea­tures that pre­serve qual­ity and pro­mote ease of open­ing and con­sumer con­ve­nience will also drive growth.

Over­all demand for meat, poul­try and seafood pack­ag­ing will grow by 3.2 per cent per annum in the period, said the Cleveland-based body.

Case ready and flex­i­ble packaging

Ana­lyst Joe Ior­illo told FoodProductionDaily.com that the con­tin­u­ing shift to case-ready packs had been grow­ing over much of the last decade, dri­ven mainly by Wal-Mart’s tran­si­tion to the for­mat in 2001.

Case-ready pack­ag­ing is val­ued by retail­ers because it elim­i­nates in-store labour costs asso­ci­ated with meat cut­ting and pack­ag­ing,” he said. “It also improves food safety, because the meat is han­dled fewer times between pro­cess­ing and retail dis­play, and case-ready pack­ag­ing is also advan­ta­geous to proces­sors because it pro­vides the oppor­tu­nity for national branding.”

Flex­i­ble pack­ag­ing will con­tinue to out­pace rigid for­mats – grow­ing at 3.7 per cent annu­ally to be worth $3.7bn by the end of 2015. This com­pares to rigid packaging’s 2.5 per cent per year – but this sec­tor will still be worth $5bn.

Con­ve­nience

Flex­i­ble growth will be spurred by increased demand for high bar­rier films for case-ready pack­ag­ing — which require value-added mate­ri­als to extend shelf and pro­tect prod­uct dur­ing trans­port and stor­age, said the report Meat, Poul­try and Seafood Packaging.

Value-added fea­tures include ele­ments such as zip­per clo­sures in bags and pouches; easy-opening fea­tures on cer­tain bags; high bar­rier films and con­tain­ers for extended shelf-life require­ments on flex­i­ble packs. In the rigid seg­ment cor­ru­gated boxes with recy­clable coat­ings and other pack­ag­ing fea­tures that increase con­ve­nience and improve stor­age capa­bil­i­ties for the con­sumer or proces­sor are fur­ther examples.

Many of these value-added fea­tures will become increas­ingly impor­tant in the years ahead because con­sumers are con­stantly drawn to pack­ag­ing that makes food prepa­ra­tion eas­ier and faster, or enables unused por­tions to be stored effi­ciently,” said Iorillo.

He added: “Con­sumers typ­i­cally have much less time to devote to meal prepa­ra­tion, so pack­ag­ing sup­pli­ers have responded by devel­op­ing pack­ag­ing inno­va­tions that make meat, poul­try and seafood prod­ucts eas­ier to use and store.”

Birds Eye’s Bake Per­fect pouch, which allows frozen seafood to be cooked directly in-pack with­out addi­tional prepa­ra­tion and Por­tion Pull bags from Cry­ovac are two good exam­ples he said.

Among flex­i­bles, pouch demand will be dri­ven by increased inroads by retort pouches into the tra­di­tional can mar­ket and healthy gains for stand up pouches in frozen meat, poul­try and seafood appli­ca­tions because of their reseal­a­bil­ity properties.

Rigid pack­ag­ing

The less dynamic prospects in rigid pack­ag­ing reflect matu­rity in large cor­ru­gated boxes and “min­i­mal advances” in metal cans, said the analyst.

But plas­tic con­tain­ers per­for­mance will be fuelled by growth in pre­pared meat and poul­try – again dri­ven by con­ve­nience trends from con­sumers – and pre­dicted to increase by 6.8 per cent to almost $330m by the end of 2015. Demand for plas­tic lunch meat tubs and con­tin­ued use of plas­tic con­tain­ers in the ready-to-eat pre­pared foods sec­tor will drive gains, said the analyst.

Increas­ing use of more expen­sive bio-based plas­tics in the seg­ment will lead to value gains.

Acces­sories and ready-to-eat

Pack­ag­ing acces­sories — such as labels, absorbent pads, net­ting, tape and tags – is fore­cast to grow by 2.8 per cent a year to $465m in the period. This jump will be sup­ported by reg­u­la­tory require­ments for nutri­tion infor­ma­tion and country-of-origin labels on meat and poul­try packs.

In the ready-to-eat mar­ket, pack­ag­ing demand will rise 5.1 per cent per year by 2015 to $410m – par­tic­u­larly for poul­try but increas­ingly for ribs and pork. Plas­tic con­tain­ers are widely used for this although some retail­ers are adopt­ing flex­i­ble pack­ag­ing such as pouches in an effort to improve their envi­ron­men­tal image, said Iorillo.

Meat, Poul­try and Seafood Pack­ag­ing is avail­able from The Free­do­nia Insti­tute price US$4,500

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