Ifco tray: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Ifco tray.jpg|thumb|An Ifco tray at a farmers market in California]] |
[[File:Ifco tray.jpg|thumb|An Ifco tray at a farmers market in California]] |
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'''Ifco trays''' (an acronym for '''Internal Fish Container''') are containers developed in France in 1985 which are primarily used in retail to transport fish, also being used to hold [[fruit]] and [[vegetables]].<ref>{{cite book |title=Germany, Garbage, and the Green Dot: Challenging the Throwaway Society |last=Fishbein |first=Bette K.|year=1994 |publisher=Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency |location=[[Cincinnati]], [[Ohio]] |isbn= 978-0-7881-3193-6|pages=25–26 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ufjWko3jsfQC&q=%22Ifco+tray%22&pg=PA25}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ifco.com/global/com/en/biz_rpc/index.php|title=IFCO RPC Management Services|accessdate=2010-03-29|publisher=IFCO SYSTEMS, Germany|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100412234343/http://www.ifco.com/global/com/en/biz_rpc/index.php|archive-date=2010-04-12|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=US Patent Issued to IFCO Systems on March 5 for "'Fish Crate' Collapsible Container for Transporting Fresh Fish" (German Inventor)|url=http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-2910288301.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150924204047/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P3-2910288301.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=24 September 2015|publisher=US Fed News Service, Including US State News {{Subscription required|via=HighBeam}}|accessdate=13 April 2015|date=5 March 2013}}</ref> |
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'''IFCO trays''' (also known as '''RPCs''' (the abbreviation for reusable plastic containers), or reusable containers, or reusable crates) are a type of [[reusable packaging]] solutions for transporting fresh food produce. IFCO SYSTEMS is the name of the company that first developed a [[Pooling (resource management)|pooling]] service for reusable plastic trays for fresh produce in 1992, when the company was founded in [[Pullach]], Germany. IFCO is the acronym for International Food Container Organization. |
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They are attractive for environmental reasons due to their ease of reuse, their capability of being stacked when full of produce in many different configurations and that they can be flattened when empty for compact return to producers/shippers/growers or for storage purposes. |
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'''Reusable packaging for fresh produce''' |
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They are very popular among supermarket retailers when storing packets of fish, meat, or loose fruit and vegetables |
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The IFCO PRCs are used for transporting perishable products and are available in different designs customized to the requirements of the produce. There are IFCO trays for [[Food#Fresh food|fresh food]], fruit and vegetables, bananas, baked goods, eggs, dairy, convenience foods, meat and fish. |
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'''Pooling service''' |
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IFCO trays are only available through the IFCO pooling service. Customers of the service share the reusable containers in a continuous closed loop. IFCO SYSTEMS refer to this pooling loop as the SmartCycle<sup>TM</sup>. |
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IFCO supplies the reusable containers to farmers and producers of fresh produce and perishable items. Customers that use the SmartCycle <sup>TM</sup> are supplied with clean, sanitized IFCO RPCs at harvest or at the end of the production cycle. The produce is shipped or transported in the reusable plastic containers on pallets to the retailers, where the produce generally goes on display at the [[Point of sale|Point of Sale]] in the IFCO trays. This reduces the number of touchpoints with the produce and aims to reduce the potential for produce damage and waste, extending the [[shelf life]] of the fresh food produce in the process. |
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When empty and used, the reusable containers are recovered and returned to the IFCO wash centers, where they are checked, repaired (if necessary), washed, and then supplied to customers and used again. |
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'''Zero Waste''' |
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When the IFCO trays reach the end of their service life and can no longer be repaired, they are granulated and made into new IFCO RPCs. The raw material stream for the IFCO reusable crates is fully traceable. The company uses 100% of the available material from the broken or end-of-use crates. The IFCO trays generally have a life span of more than 10 years, before they are made into new crates. There is no packaging waste and there is a 100% material reutilization. |
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'''Circular economy model''' |
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The IFCO pooling service of RPCs and material reutilization is based on the [[Circular economy|circular economy model]], which promotes the [[reuse]], [[Sharing economy|sharing,]] repair, refurbishment, [[remanufacturing]] and [[recycling]] within a closed-loop system in order to avoid waste and reduce the environmental impact of industrial designs. |
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'''Sustainability''' |
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Compared to [[Disposable product#Packaging|disposable products and packaging]], reusable containers help reduce the overall environmental impact of the fresh grocery supply chain. |
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As the IFCO trays can be folded compactly, they require less space in the [[reverse logistics]] as they are mainly the same size and are therefore compatible when folded. More IFCO RPCs can be stacked in trucks and in storage, saving food miles, energy consumption and storage costs. |
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'''Cradle to Cradle Design''' |
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The IFCO European line of Lift Lock reusable plastic containers (RPCs) are the first and only reusable food packaging containers to be awarded Cradle to Cradle Certified® (Version 3.1) at the Silver level by the independent non-profit Cradle to Cradle Products Innovation Institute, which is based on the [[Cradle-to-cradle design|Cradle to Cradle]] design philosophy of [[Michael Braungart]] and [[William McDonough]]. These IFCO trays were awarded Gold for Material Reutilization. |
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'''Food safety''' |
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The IFCO RPCs are washed and sanitized to food-grade quality after each use. The washing process is independently audited. |
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'''Company history''' |
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Founded in 1992 in Germany, the company originally focused on Europe and expanded into the US market in 2003, when it launched the first Black RPC. |
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IFCO serves customers in over 50 countries, has offices in over 30 countries, 89 service centers and employs around 1,100 people. The company has a pool of over 314 million reusable plastic containers, which are used in over 1.7 billion shipments of fresh produce every year. Over 14,000 producers use the IFCO trays, and over 300 retailers. |
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IFCO is an independent company since its acquisition by Triton and [[Abu Dhabi Investment Authority]] (ADIA) in May 2019 from the Brambles company who had owned IFCO since 2011. |
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'''Innovation''' |
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IFCO Systems has filed a total of 1,174 patents for the IFCO reusable plastic containers and pooling system. |
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'''Slogan''' |
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The company slogan is: “A better supply chain serves us all. Let’s eat.” |
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==Controversy== |
==Controversy== |
Revision as of 12:40, 13 July 2021
Ifco trays (an acronym for Internal Fish Container) are containers developed in France in 1985 which are primarily used in retail to transport fish, also being used to hold fruit and vegetables.[1][2][3]
They are attractive for environmental reasons due to their ease of reuse, their capability of being stacked when full of produce in many different configurations and that they can be flattened when empty for compact return to producers/shippers/growers or for storage purposes.
They are very popular among supermarket retailers when storing packets of fish, meat, or loose fruit and vegetables
Controversy
Their adoption has generated controversy between developed countries which are consumers of produce and developing countries which are producers, primarily due to the cost of using the trays as opposed to using locally produced containers. In particular, many developing countries lack the capital-intensive infrastructure to develop and support the hi-technology plastic molding machinery necessary to produce the returnable trays. Analysis continues to compare the relative benefits of reusable trays, which require a full cycle (use, cleaning and return) versus one-time-use disposable containers which do not require return to the shipper, but instead are disposed of after one use. Disposable containers create a waste-disposal burden on recipients, while the returnable containers burden producers who must purchase containers and arrange for a return cycle.[4]
References
- ^ Fishbein, Bette K. (1994). Germany, Garbage, and the Green Dot: Challenging the Throwaway Society. Cincinnati, Ohio: Risk Reduction Engineering Laboratory, Office of Research and Development, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. pp. 25–26. ISBN 978-0-7881-3193-6.
- ^ "IFCO RPC Management Services". IFCO SYSTEMS, Germany. Archived from the original on 2010-04-12. Retrieved 2010-03-29.
- ^ "US Patent Issued to IFCO Systems on March 5 for "'Fish Crate' Collapsible Container for Transporting Fresh Fish" (German Inventor)". US Fed News Service, Including US State News – via HighBeam (subscription required) . 5 March 2013. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
- ^ Environmental Requirements and Market Access - Chapter 20. Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development. 2005. pp. 270–274. ISBN 978-92-64-01374-2.
External links