• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Advertise
  • About Craft Brewing Business

Craft Brewing Business

Professional Insight, Unfiltered

  • News
  • Business & Marketing
  • Ingredients & Supplies
  • Packaging & Distribution
  • Equipment
  • Webinars & White Papers
  • COVID-19

Packaging innovation: Oskar Blues to shrink-wrap its 24-can variety cases

May 9, 2018Chris Crowell

Oskar Blues First Shrink Pallet

Dow Packaging and Specialty Plastics, a business unit of The Dow Chemical Co., is collaborating with Oskar Blues Brewery along with plastics converter Berry Global and Ampacet, a leader in color masterbatch technologies, to produce the industry’s first printed collation shrink packaging in the United States for the brewer’s 24-can variety cases. Oskar Blues piloted the packaging in 2017, which has resulted in more than 300 percent growth through national retailers.

The shrink solution serves as secondary packaging that wraps corrugated trays, replacing previous shrink-wrapping that held two 12-pack cartons together. The collated shrink packaging continues to feature Oskar Blues’ branding and design, maintaining shelf appeal for consumers. The brand’s new packaging has generated:

  • 40 percent cost savings
  • 64 percent reduction in secondary packaging materials usage
  • 73 percent fewer trucks delivering packaging materials to Oskar Blues

Oskar Blues, part of the CANarchy Craft Brewery Collective, the ninth largest craft brewer in United States according to the National Brewers Association, expects to see 46 percent energy savings and 51 percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions based on an environmental impact assessment by Allied Development.

“Moving to collated shrink packaging for our 24-can variety packs results in business growth, sustainability benefits and strong shelf appeal,” said Jeremy Rudolf, operations manager, CANarchy Craft Brewery Collective. “Our primary focus is the quality of the beer we brew, but we also continuously evaluate options to evolve in other areas, and enhance our sustainability profiles with innovations like this new packaging solution.”

Oskar Blues’ packaging shift comes at a time when demand for collation shrink continues to rise as brands seek more cost-effective, sustainable secondary packaging solutions. The rapidly-growing craft beer industry is a logical area for growth in collation shrink secondary packaging.

“Craft beer companies like Oskar Blues are agile and willing to try innovative, creative ways to differentiate their products in an increasingly crowded marketplace,” said Ritika Kalia, end-use marketing manager, Dow Packaging and Specialty Plastics. “Brewers have a strong opportunity to leverage the benefits of collation shrink for secondary beer packaging, from cost savings to sustainability.”

After initial equipment investment, film costs less per unit packaged than traditional materials, reducing warehouse storage space and the need for raw materials.

“The ability to print on collation shrink film is essential for applications where branding is so important,” said Markay Doane, Product Line Director, Berry Global Inc. “More and more companies see its potential, given the opportunity to achieve cost and sustainability goals while still capturing consumer attention with strong branding and shelf appeal.”

Dow Oskar Blues shrink wrap 24 cases cbb crop
Check out this printed collation shrink packaging for 24-packs, Dow Packaging, Berry Global say it’s eco-focused
Shrink film wrapping machine
INDEVCO Plastics debuts 50 percent postconsumer recycled shrink wrap for beverage packaging
oskar-blues
Oskar Blues Brewery just redesigned its logo, cans and packaging
CANarchy now packaging its various brands (Oskar Blues, Cigar City, Squatters and Perrin) in a mixed 12-pack

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. bikeandbeer says

    May 16, 2018 at 9:46 pm

    I’m a huge fan of everything OB produces and I ‘m all about saving money but I wonder about recyclability. I live in Denver which has a very robust recycling program but they do not accept plastic bags, plastic wrap or plastic 6-pack holders. At least a 12-pack or 24-pack cardboard box is readily acceptable as recyclable material in most cities/states/etc. I’d be willing to foot the bill on the higher packaging costs if I knew it would keep stuff out of the landfill.

    Log in to Reply
  2. Hector Aguilera says

    May 9, 2018 at 7:22 pm

    Rodrigo Nogueira

    Log in to Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

  • The beer flow: tallboys are trending, top IPA SKUs and on-premise taps continue to pour more
  • Team Left Hand hits $5 million milestone in MS fundraising effort
  • Marketing idea of the week: WeldWerks Brewing’s Golden Ticket promo for 6th anniversary
  • KHS keg fillers updated to be more sustainable, efficient

Sign up for our newsletter

unsubscribe from list

Most Popular Today

Recent Features

  • beer flow pour glass multiple pictures data-001The beer flow: tallboys are trending, top IPA SKUs and on-premise taps continue to pour more
    March 3, 2021
  • Innokeg CombiKegKHS keg fillers updated to be more sustainable, efficient
    March 3, 2021
  • Summit IPA variety packIPA sales growth continues thanks to subcategories, according to 2021 IPA Forecast
    March 2, 2021
  • Free samples! These frozen whole cone hops from Michigan’s Blue Lake Hops are perfect for year-round harvest hop brews
    March 1, 2021
  • Whoa, Boulder Beer’s rebrand is badass (enjoy this photo post)
    March 1, 2021
  • libdib online beer distributorWhy (and how) Cabarrus Brewing will stick with online sales post-lockdown
    February 25, 2021

Footer

  • Email Newsletter Sign Up
  • About Craft Brewing Business
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise on Craft Brewing Business
  • Media Kit Download
  • Privacy and Terms

© 2021 · CBB Media LLC

Continue ...

sponsored by