• The Value of the Sustainable Packaging Summit with Danielle Goad of Specright
    Jun 28 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors welcomes Danielle Goad to discuss her journey at Specright, her recent move to London to lead the EMEA division, and the growing importance of packaging data management in the age of PPWR. Danielle shares how Specright helps companies build a foundational data infrastructure to navigate complex regulations, reduce reporting burdens, and drive sustainable innovation. She and Cory also reflect on the Sustainable Packaging Summit in Utrecht and what to expect at this year's expanded three-day event in November.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Danielle's eight-year journey at Specright, from intern to Director of EMEA
    • Her relocation to London and experience building a new team abroad
    • What Specright does as an AI-powered specification and data management platform
    • The difference between EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) and PPWR (Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation)
    • Why PPWR is a long-term data foundation challenge, not just a one-time reporting exercise
    • Key PPWR milestones, including the August 2026 deadline around PFAS and declaration of conformity
    • How having accurate data helps companies avoid over-reporting and potential fines
    • The maturity scale from static/chaotic data to a standardized, confident data foundation
    • Specright's role in helping companies evaluate portfolios and model the impact of material changes (e.g., adding PCR content)
    • The value of the Sustainable Packaging Summit in Utrecht — quality speakers, collaborative atmosphere, and industry depth
    • Specright's upcoming workshop at this year's Summit focused on PPWR and spec management transformation
    • The partnership between Specright and Lorax EPI as complementary best-in-breed solutions


    Resources Mentioned:

    • Specright


    Contact:
    Listeners can connect with Danielle Goad on LinkedIn or reach her directly at danielle@specright.com.

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • How Burton Snowboards is Shaping the Future of Sustainable Packaging
    Jun 21 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors reconnects with his friend Mitch Rovito from Burton Snowboards following a tour of Burton's Vermont facility. Mitch shares his unique origin story — writing a mock cover letter to Burton as an 18-year-old packaging student at RIT — and how that dream became reality. The conversation explores Burton's deep-rooted culture of curiosity and sustainability under founder Jake Burton's legacy and current owner Donna Carpenter, the organic partnership between Burton and Atlantic Packaging's New Earth Project, and the innovative strides Burton is making toward eliminating single-use plastics from its packaging.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Mitch's early passion for both snowboarding and packaging science, and how he discovered packaging through a chance visit to RIT in ninth grade
    • Burton's culture of curiosity and innovation, rooted in founder Jake Burton's legacy and sustained by owner Donna Carpenter
    • The advantages of being a privately held company in driving aggressive sustainability decisions
    • How the Burton–Atlantic Packaging/New Earth Project partnership formed organically through a chance connection with Don Meek in Vermont
    • The "We Do This Together" philosophy and open-source approach to sustainability collaboration across brands and suppliers
    • Julia Marsh of Sway and the role of inspired, passionate individuals in driving the sustainable packaging movement
    • FiberStrap and its application with Ibis Cycles as an example of cross-brand sustainability innovation
    • The See Change Sessions event in Vermont — its growth, unique format blending wellness with industry collaboration, and impact on attendees
    • Burton's progress from ~6% to ~90% elimination of single-use plastics in retail consumer-facing packaging
    • Challenges of building global, omnichannel packaging while navigating evolving EPR regulations across the US, Europe, and beyond
    • The Digital Product Passport (DPP) initiative from the EU and what supply chain transparency will mean for brands
    • FSC certification, recycled content targets, and managing packaging development 24 months ahead of product launch
    • Ongoing challenges with snowboard shrink wrap and the search for viable, scalable alternatives

    Resources Mentioned:

    • Burton Snowboards
    • New Earth Project
    • See Change Sessions
    • Sway
    • FibreStrap
    • Ibis Cycles
    • Bluesign Certification
    • California EPR Packaging Program

    Contact:

    Listeners interested in learning more about Burton's sustainability initiatives can visit burton.com. For information about the New Earth Project and Atlantic Packaging, reach out through atlanticpkg.com.

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    33 mins
  • Live at SPC Impact with Olga Kachook 2026 Trends Report
    Jun 14 2026

    In this special live episode recorded at the Country Music Hall of Fame in Nashville, Tennessee during the Sustainable Packaging Coalition Impact Event, Cory Connors shares the stage with Olga Kachook to present the Third Annual Sustainable Packaging Trends Report for 2025–2026. Olga walks through the four key trends shaping the industry and dives deeper into each one in conversation with Cory, covering everything from EPR maturity to innovation in healthcare packaging.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Regions defining recyclability — Canada, the UK, and the EU leading the way and what that means for the US
    • Innovation breakthroughs in OTC and healthcare packaging, including paper prescription bottles
    • EPR turning five — progress made and challenges that remain
    • Shared data driving recyclability clarity, including the upgrade of polypropylene cold cups under the How to Recycle program
    • Designing for EPR — setting your own certainty in the face of regulatory uncertainty
    • The "magic wand" thought experiment: how would you design your packaging portfolio if starting fresh today?
    • Coated paper and molded fiber as focus areas for the SPC's paper recyclability collaborative
    • The role of AI sorting technology in generating better recycling data
    • Reusable e-commerce as an emerging opportunity — FedEx and Returnity's B2B partnership
    • Predictions for the 2027 Trends Report, including consumer education and infrastructure expansion in EPR states
    • Cabinet Health's refillable OTC packaging model, available at Target and Amazon

    Resources Mentioned:

    • Sustainable Packaging Coalition (SPC)
    • SPC Paper Recyclability Collaborative
    • How to Recycle Program
    • Cabinet Health — refillable OTC packaging
    • NextGen Consortium
    • Returnity Reusable Shipping

    Contact: For more information on the SPC Trends Report, scan the QR code mentioned in the episode or visit sustainablepackaging.org.

    Thank you for tuning in to Sustainable Packaging with Cory Connors, presented by Atlantic Packaging!

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    25 mins
  • How Germany Is Leading the Reusable Packaging Revolution with Dana Voges
    Jun 7 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors welcomes Dana Voges to discuss her remarkable journey from growing up visiting landfills on Take Your Kid to Work Day in Colorado, to leading reusable packaging innovation in Germany. Dana shares how SEA ME and their open pool system Zerooo are building a scalable, brand-agnostic reuse infrastructure for cosmetics and personal care — and what the rest of the world can learn from Germany's deposit return system.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Dana's unique background: from Superfund site field trips and trash fashion shows to circular economy research at the Technical University of Berlin
    • Germany's deposit return system (DRS) and why it works — and why the US lags behind
    • What SEA ME is and how their reusable packaging model works for cosmetics and personal care products
    • The Zerooo open pool system: a pay-per-use model that handles reverse logistics, washing, and redeployment for participating brands
    • The origin of the Zerooo name and its triple infinity loop logo
    • Consumer behavior as the hardest challenge in reuse systems — and how pre-fill models reduce friction
    • The "chicken and egg" problem between retailers and brands, and how SEA ME is bringing both to the table
    • The roller coaster analogy: why reuse systems require coordinating infrastructure, legislation, incentives, and behavior simultaneously
    • How parallel revenue from the SEA ME brand funded the system during early-stage high costs
    • Economies of scale: how wash costs for 10,000 bottles are nearly the same as for 1,000
    • Aesthetics and wear: clever bottle design to prevent scuffing and maintain brand appearance across cycles
    • Why metal containers present challenges for reuse: keepability, high upfront carbon footprint, visual inspection limitations, and consumer familiarity
    • Why glass and PET are the preferred materials for SEA ME's system
    • The importance of integrating reuse systems with existing consumer habits (e.g., reusable bags, existing return infrastructure)
    • SEA ME's current footprint: ~900 sale and return locations in Germany, with major European retail expansion underway

    Resources Mentioned:

    • SEA ME
    • Zerooo
    • Ellen MacArthur Foundation
    • Cradle to Cradle by Michael Braungart

    Contact:

    Brands selling personal care, home care, wellness, or beauty products in PET bottles interested in joining the European Zerooo system can reach out to Dana Voges and the SEA ME team directly.

    Thank you for tuning in to Sustainable Packaging with Cory Connors!

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    30 mins
  • How Mill Turns Everyday Food Waste Into a Resource with Sydney Grier
    May 31 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors sits down with Sydney Grier, Packaging Lead at Mill, to explore how the company is tackling one of the most overlooked environmental problems: household food waste. Sydney shares her journey from studying environmental management at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo to becoming a packaging engineer, and how she ended up joining Mill — then operating in stealth mode as Chewy Labs. Together, Cory and Sydney discuss how Mill's food recycler works, why composting beats landfilling, the innovative all-paper packaging Sydney designed for a 60-pound device, and what the future holds for commercial expansion into places like Whole Foods.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Sydney's path from environmental management to packaging engineering at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo
    • How Mill originated from a desire to tackle food waste at the household level
    • What Mill does: drying, grinding, and dehydrating food scraps to reduce volume by ~80%
    • Challenges of composting access across the U.S. and how Mill fills the gap
    • Mill's commercial expansion: launching nationwide in Whole Foods in 2027 at 10x home capacity
    • Designing paper-based protective packaging for a 60-pound device — without styrofoam
    • The value of involving a packaging engineer early in the product design cycle
    • How Mill's bin is rated to withstand 200 g's of peak acceleration (equivalent to a car hitting a wall at 440 mph)
    • Output options for Mill food grounds: garden spreading, local compost drop-offs, backyard chickens, or Mill's chicken feed send-back program

    Resources Mentioned:

    • Mill — food recycler for the home and commercial kitchens
    • Whole Foods Market — Mill's first commercial partner (launching 2027)
    • Mill's chicken feed program

    Contact:

    • Mill
    • LinkedIn: Sydney Grier

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
  • What Happens Inside Atlantic's Packaging Solution Center
    May 24 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors welcomes Kyle Pischel and Jake Wyns to discuss the Atlantic Packaging Solutions Center — what it is, how it came to be, and the innovative work happening inside it every day. Kyle shares his background in packaging, from studying at Michigan State to working on Coca-Cola's packaging innovations team before joining Atlantic. Jake recounts his decade at Atlantic, beginning with a deep dive into stretch film and evolving into unit load stability and e-commerce packaging. Together, they walk through the science of load containment, the design program, and the future of sustainable packaging materials.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Kyle's career path from Michigan State and Coca-Cola to Atlantic Packaging and the MUST monitoring system
    • Jake's background in stretch film performance testing and the fingerprinting of film properties
    • The origin story of the Solution Center: from Stretch University to a full technical hub in Charlotte, NC
    • How the MUST monitoring system tracks stretch film application and maintains standards set in the Solution Center
    • The science of unit load containment — weight, coefficient of friction, stacking patterns, and pyramidal wrap profiles
    • Over 15,000 horizontal impact tests and 5,000+ hours of vibration testing conducted at the facility
    • Atlantic's holistic approach to packaging: removing strapping, corner boards, and downgauging corrugated alongside stretch film optimization
    • The in-house design program led by designer Mary Ashland, focused on sustainable material substitution and end-of-life strategy
    • Post-consumer recycled (PCR) content in stretch film — finding the right percentage for performance and sustainability
    • The shift toward fiber-based packaging solutions and coated paper technologies for flow-wrap applications
    • Atlantic's investment in Remo recycling equipment to process stretch film bales into PCR resin
    • EPR (Extended Producer Responsibility) legislation as a driver of reduced virgin plastic usage

    Resources Mentioned:

    • Atlantic Packaging Solution Center
    • MUST Monitoring System
    • Landsmont multi-axis vibration equipment
    • Closed Loop System for Stretch Film

    Contact:
    Listeners interested in a Solution Center visit or packaging consultation can reach out through Atlantic Packaging's website or connect with Kyle Pischel and Jake Wyns directly.

    Thank you for tuning in to Sustainable Packaging with Cory Connors!

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    27 mins
  • Inside the World's Largest Aluminum Packaging Manufacturer with Predrag Ozmo of Ball Corporation
    May 17 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors welcomes Predrag Ozmo to discuss the sustainability story behind Ball Corporation — the world's largest aluminum packaging manufacturer, producing more than 100 billion cans per year. Predrag shares his background growing up in Serbia and his early career at MiTeCo, a hazardous waste management company specializing in chemical, pharmaceutical, and PCB waste, before moving to Inos Balkan (part of the Greek Anamet group), a metal recycling company, and then joining Ball in 2019. He explains why aluminum is often called an "energy bank" — a truly circular material that can be recycled endlessly, with up to 95% energy savings versus primary production. Predrag walks through Ball's climate transition plan and its 2030 and 2050 goals, the decarbonization pathways for primary aluminum (hydropower, inert anodes, and the ELYSIS breakthrough), the growing importance of recycled content, and the innovative partnerships that are bringing refillable and first-of-their-kind aluminum packaging to market.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • Predrag's journey from metal recycling at MiTeCo in Serbia to sustainability leadership at Ball Corporation
    • Ball Corporation's scale as the world's largest aluminum packaging manufacturer (100+ billion cans per year)
    • Aluminum as a circular, infinitely recyclable "energy bank" material
    • The 95% energy savings achieved when aluminum is recycled versus primary production
    • Ball's climate transition plan and 2030 / 2050 sustainability goals
    • Decarbonization of primary aluminum through hydropower, inert anodes, and the ELYSIS technology
    • The role of recycled content in reducing packaging's carbon footprint
    • Ball's partnership with Meadow for refillable soap and shampoo in aluminum bottles
    • Brazil partnership with Sofie and Aeroflaks on the first ASI-certified aluminum aerosol can
    • Unilever and Alcoa's ELYSIS pilot as a model for low-carbon primary metal
    • The 10–15 year vision for aluminum packaging and the circular economy
    • Why aluminum's infinite recyclability makes it a long-term sustainability winner

    Resources Mentioned:

    • Ball Corporation
    • ELYSIS
    • Aluminium Stewardship Initiative (ASI)
    • Meadow (refillable aluminum personal care packaging)

    Contact:

    Listeners can learn more or reach out to Predrag directly:

    • LinkedIn
    • Ball Corporation


    Thank you for tuning in to Sustainable Packaging with Cory Connors!


    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest


    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    32 mins
  • New Earth Ventures Launch with Matt Saunders and Wes Carter
    May 5 2026

    In this episode, Cory Connors welcomes Atlantic Packaging President Wes Carter and New Earth Ventures Managing Partner Matt Saunders for an exciting announcement: the official launch of New Earth Ventures (NEV), a venture capital firm launching in partnership with Atlantic Packaging. Wes shares how Atlantic's decades-long commitment to packaging innovation and sustainability laid the foundation for NEV, while Matt discusses his background in venture capital and how his partnership with Wes came together. Together, they outline how NEV will support entrepreneurs, startups, and customers working to build a more circular, sustainable packaging future.

    Key Topics Discussed:

    • The 30-year history of Atlantic Packaging's innovation philosophy and how it evolved into New Earth Ventures
    • The role of the Packaging Solution Center in Charlotte as a hub for packaging science and technology
    • How NEV differs from traditional corporate venture capital by pairing deep packaging expertise with a scalable fund model
    • The MUST stretch film optimization program as a model for how technology and packaging can intersect to drive massive ROI
    • Current NEV portfolio highlights including Specright and investments in material and AI technology companies

    Resources Mentioned:

    New Earth Ventures:

    • Website
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn

    Guests:

    • Wes Carter: LinkedIn
    • Matt Saunders: LinkedIn

    Contact:

    Innovators, founders, and brands interested in partnering or learning more can reach out via the NEV website or social channels.

    Thank you for tuning in to Sustainable Packaging with Cory Connors!

    Support our Sponsors

    Learn more here:

    - 3M

    - Specright

    - Forest

    Connect with Cory

    Connect with Cory on LinkedIn here:
    https://www.linkedin.com/in/cory-connors/

    I'm here to help you make your packaging more sustainable! Reach out today and I'll get back to you asap.

    This podcast is an independent production and the podcast production is an original work of the author. All rights of ownership and reproduction are retained—copyright 2022.

    Show More Show Less
    26 mins