March 29, 2024

Melodea Spearheads new era in sustainable packaging

Green-Tech start-up’s recyclable cellulose coated packaging serves higher ethical standards, reduces plastic waste

Green-tech start-up Melodea, Ltd. joins the sustainable packaging scene to take on the plastic waste crisis. The company developed MelOx, a high-performance, plant-sourced barrier coating that protects packaged products from oxygen and oil and grease transmission. The company also developed Melodea VBcoat that protects packaged goods from water vapor and oil and grease transmission.

Unlike existing materials used for such purposes like plastics and aluminum, Melodea sources its barrier coating material for packaging from wood pulp, the same raw material used to make paper. The innovativ green solution helps steer paper and packaging producers toward more socially responsible packaging routes and will enable them to meet sustainability goals more quickly. The coatings are sustainable and recyclable, and do not contribute to plastic waste pollution.

Plant cellulose replaces plastic

“Cellulose, the primary building block of the cell walls of all plants, is the most abundant biopolymer on the planet,” explains Shaul Lapidot, PhD, CEO and co-founder of Melodea.

“It provides plants with extraordinary strength, and is a lightweight—yet strong—material We found that this bounteous and renewable material can be utilized to produce novel, eco-friendly packaging alternatives for the packaging industry.”

The company applies proprietary technology to extract cellulose nanocrystals from wood pulp sourced from trees grown in industrial forests. The sustainable barrier coatings are uniquely designed to offer protection from oxygen, oil, grease, and water vapor transmission. The coatings helps maintain the quality and integrity of the packaged foods inside, while eliminating the need for aluminum and plastic. As a forestry by-product, it also is compostable, recyclable, and completely non-toxic for people and the environment.Once done with the package, one can simply throw it into the recycling bin.

Helping packagers comply

“Consumers are imposing more strident demands when it comes to the welfare of the planet, and this increasingly resonates in their purchasing behavior,” adds Lapidot. “Concurrently, the supply chain is ‘greening’ up its act, especially in light of legislative measures curbing plastic use. The Melodea barrier coating helps the packaging industry make a smoother shift from petroleum-based plastics to plant-based materials, without compromising safety or performance.”

The EU Single-Use Plastics Directive (SUPD) went into force in July, effectively placing a ban on the ten most polluting single-use plastic items littering EU beaches. Among these are plastic bags, packets, wrappers, and food containers. The directive also placed labeling requirements to inform customers on the packaging’s disposal options and its content.

Packaging in harmony with nature

“It is no secret that the solution for a sustainable and circular packaging industry necessitates moving to bio-based materials,” asserts Zvika Weiss, CFO of Melodea. “Our cellulose-based barrier coatings offer an economically affordable, naturally abundant, and sustainable alternative to oil-based products. More importantly, its raw material lives in harmony with nature—it comes from the forest, and it returns to the earth at the end of its lifecycle.”

The company’s liquid formulas can be applied as a coating to various substrates, including paper, paperboard, bio-plastic, and even plastic itself. It serves companies across the packaging value chain, from paper and packaging producers to consumer goods manufacturers and food companies. The high-barrier coatings can be tailored to a broad range of packaging products, such as pouches, lids, and food and beverage cartons. It is suitable for packaging both dry and liquid products. “Our coatings can easily be integrated into standard industrial coating lines, including slot dies, rod coaters, and gravures,” Weiss adds. “The coatings already are in pilot use by a number of major companies.”

The Melodea story

Melodea, Ltd. was originally founded as a spin-off project at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem by Dr. Shaul Lapidot, PhD, Melodea’s CEO, together with composites expert the late Tord Gustafsson and Prof. Oded Shoseyov, PhD, a renowned expert in nanomaterials and plant biotechnology who is on the Melodea advisory board.

Melodea’s technology is protected by 14 patents, including several covering its production processes and product portfolio. Melodea was a winner of two of the most prestigious awards in the packaging field, the Packaging Europe 2019 sustainability award and the WorldStar Award for 2020, granted by the World Packaging Organization. “We are positive that our products will make a tangible positive impact on reshaping the trillion-dollar packaging industry, helping to transform it into a more circular and sustainable industry,” concludes Lapidot.

Melodea has raised a total of US$20M at the close of its C funding round, with key investments from global leaders across the chemistry and forestry pulp and paper industries, including Bazan Group; Asia Plus Investment banking; Swedish forest owners Holmen, AB; Brazilian paper producers Klabin, SA; and Double A pcl, Thailand.

  • Source: Melodea, Ltd.

Related articles

Austrian Packaging Day 2021

On the occasion of the Austrian Packaging Day 2021 “Circular Economy – Orientation in the Packaging Jungle”, the FH Campus Wien is organizing a press conference on October 28, 11.00 a.m. in the MAK. International guideline for successfully increasing recycling rates There is no internationally valid standard for how packaging must be designed so that it

Siegwerk’s raw materials supply chain under pressure

Packaging ink suppliers are facing increased prices on pigment raw materials, petrochemical price increases and supply constraints and higher freight cost due to the reduced availability of containers. This has resulted in significant pressure across the entire packaging ink industry, and, as a result, Siegwerk, a leading global provider of printing inks for packaging applications