DeFife provided a glass market update at the Unified Wine & Grape Symposium, highlighting the sustainability of wine in glass bottles and the upcoming implementation of packaging laws that will increase wine bottle recycling in California
Sacramento, CA – January 27, 2023 – On Wednesday, January 25, Scott DeFife, president of the Glass Packaging Institute (GPI), spoke at the Unified Wine & Grape Symposium regarding the U.S. production and shipments of glass, and provided insight into why glass bottles are the sustainable choice for wine.
In his presentation to the press, DeFife provided a glass market update: “In 2022, demand remained high and domestic production was strong. While imported glass bottles were impacted by the international logistics backlogs affecting multiple industries across the United States, domestic glass suppliers never ran out of excess inventory, or raw materials to make glass. All materials needed to manufacture glass in the states can be sourced in North America. Through November 2022, the domestic glass container plants shipped out roughly 1.82 billion wine bottles to their customers – representing an increase of 17 million bottles compared to November 2021. Domestic wine bottle manufacturers can supply growing wine market needs in 2023.”
DeFife also addressed the sustainability of wine packaged in glass: “Glass is made from all-natural sustainable raw materials, including significant percentages of recycled glass. 85 percent of consumers prefer to buy wine in glass, making it an optimal packaging choice. A glass container can be recycled indefinitely without loss in quality — in fact, it can take as little as 30 days for a recycled bottle to be back on the shelves as a new bottle.
“Glass is unlike most other packaging materials for many reasons – it doesn’t harm biodiversity, is sourced locally and sustainably, requires no film or plastic lining and contains no synthetic materials that can interact with food and beverages. Production of wine bottles has become more sustainable over time – glass bottles are over 30 percent lighter than they were 20 years ago, and the process emits 50 percent less CO2 than fifty years ago. The glass industry continually looks for new ways to address consumers’ wishes for an even more sustainable glass container, through research and development at the plant. This includes incorporation of hydrogen technology, the potential of refill and reuse programs, and further increasing recycled content through more effective recycling programs.
“Importantly, the availability of recycled glass for making new bottles, which is already strong in U.S. wine regions, looks to be increasing soon with the implementation of packaging laws in California and Oregon, including the expansion of container deposit programs in California that will increase wine bottle recycling in the state. As other states consider or enact recycling reform, the opportunity for glass in a circular economy only improves.”
Please find the full presentation from the press conference here for your convenience.
About the Glass Packaging Institute
Founded in 1919 as the Glass Container Association of America, the Glass Packaging Institute (GPI) is the trade association representing the North American glass container industry. On behalf of glass container manufacturers, GPI promotes glass as the optimal packaging choice, advances environmental and recycling policies, advocates industry standards, and educates packaging professionals. Follow GPI on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and LinkedIn for updates on all things glass. Learn more at www.gpi.org.