Colgate plans new, cheaper, recyclable toothpaste tube

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Colgate faces the challenge of making sure consumers recycle the household basic and that facilities properly process the tube.

Colgate faces the challenge of ensuring that consumers recycle household basics and that recycling facilities process the tube properly.

PHOTO: COLGATEPALMOLIVECO/INSTAGRAM

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NEW YORK Colgate-Palmolive plans to launch a modified cheaper version of its recyclable toothpaste tube this year that uses less plastic and is easier to ship, the Optic White maker’s chief sustainability officer Ann Tracy told Reuters on Tuesday.

The New York-based company has been converting the roughly 9 billion toothpaste tubes it sells annually to a commonly recyclable plastic, which helps reduce waste but is more expensive to manufacture.

It has now made a breakthrough a cheaper version, which uses 16 per cent less plastic, is 16 per cent lighter and company tests showed it being easier to dispense from and having superior “feel in hands”.

The company found consumers did not want to pay more, so had absorbed the higher cost of the previous recycled model rather than passing it on, Ms Tracy said separately during a panel at the Reuters Responsible Business United States conference.

Ms Tracy told Reuters in an interview that lots of different studies had been conducted looking at whether consumers would pay more for something considered “green”.

“You have to look at our products. Maybe they will for a car, but for a tube of toothpaste maybe they won’t,” she said.

Nevertheless, Colgate, like many manufacturers of household goods, has broadly hiked prices on its toothpastes, dish soaps and pet foods over the past year-and-a-half to offset skyrocketing commodity and labour costs.

In North America, about 77 per cent of Colgate’s toothpaste units are now sold in a recycled tube, Ms Tracy said, a figure she expects to rise to 95 per cent by the end of 2023. Globally, 43 per cent of toothpaste tubes were recyclable by the end of 2022, she added.

Colgate faces the challenge of ensuring that consumers recycle household basics and that recycling facilities process the tube properly.

“We’re at this chicken-and-egg place where the material recycling facilities are concerned they’ll have contamination because not all the tubes are converted yet,” Ms Tracy said. “So our goal is to help share the technology to help it get there as quickly as possible.”

Modern recycling plants with automation can process the tube more easily, she said.

“We understand the challenge, but if we didn’t develop the tube, we would never get there,” she said. REUTERS

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