In response to PepsiCo’s announcement, Oceana issued the following statement from Senior Vice President Matt Littlejohn:
“Having Pepsi increase its use of reusable and refillable packaging would be good news for the oceans. Increasing the share of refillable bottles sold means less plastic pollution. However, the company’s pledge currently lacks the specifics needed to be certain that it will result in the increased sale of refillable bottles and the reduction of single-use plastic.
PepsiCo needs to detail its planned increase for reusable packaging for each business, particularly in countries where the company and its bottlers already sell refillable bottles. The company also needs to quantify how the sale of additional SodaStream machines, powders, and concentrates reduces the company’s existing single-use plastic footprint. If the additional powders and concentrates sold are packaged in plastic sachets or other types of plastic that are difficult to recycle, it could mean replacing one plastic pollution problem with another.
Unfortunately, there is reason to be skeptical. PepsiCo is — according to its own data — increasing its use of plastic and is not on track to meet its plastic reduction promises. According to the “Global Commitment 2022 Progress Report” released last month by the Ellen MacArthur Foundation, in 2021, PepsiCo used 5.5 billion pounds of plastic packaging. This was 331 million pounds more plastic packaging than the company used the previous year. PepsiCo also used 5% more virgin plastic packaging in 2021 compared to 2020, despite its goal to reduce virgin plastic per serving by 50% by 2030. Additionally, the Break Free From Plastic Brand Audit recently listed PepsiCo as the second leading corporate polluter “fueling the plastic crisis.”
PepsiCo does not yet report to the Ellen MacArthur Foundation — as a Global Commitment Signatory — what percentage of their packaging is reusable. Going forward, PepsiCo should publicly report on its progress toward reaching its reusable goal.
Plastic is devastating the world’s seas. Studies have estimated that individuals from 55% of seabird species, 70% of marine mammal species, and 100% of sea turtle species have ingested or become entangled in plastic.