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KN21029 KEY NOTE PACKAGING (FOOD & DRINK) SEPTEMBER 1999

ISBN 1-85765-860-4

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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Food and drink packaging was worth around £6.3bn in 1998 and accounts for 54.8 percent of the total packaging market, which has an estimated value of £11.5bn. Paper and board represents the largest sector of the food and drink packaging market, followed by plastics, metal and glass. The contribution from wood is considered to be negligible and is thus excluded from the total.
The food and drink industries in the UK are operating in mature markets. Volume consumption is only slowly growing and end users are very resistant to price increases which are not related to the normal fluctuations in material costs. There is oversupply of all the materials used by the packaging markets but the repercussions of oversupply are most acutely experienced by the paper and board industry.
Demand for plastic materials has increased and plastic's share in the food and drink packaging industry has grown steadily. Several leading companies that once specialised in paper and board products, e.g. Waddington PLC and Rexam PLC, have decided to concentrate more effort and resources into developing their involvement in plastics, and this is a trend that others may follow. The metal and glass packaging industries are more narrowly focused on the manufacture of containers than the paper and board and plastics industries. Steel and aluminium cans are primarily used for the long-term storage of food and pet foods, and for single-serve drinks. There are very few volume markets left for glass containers -- although the milk bottle is an exception -- and the glass packaging industry is concentrating on supplying the premium, higher value, low-volume prestige markets in foods and alcoholic drinks. Although not immune from potential competition from paper, board and plastic, the metal and glass container manufacturers have relatively stable, but only slowly expanding, niche markets.
A slower rate of market growth is anticipated and all manufacturers are seeking to reduce the cost of their materials: paper and board is being made thinner and lighter, as are the metals used in can manufacture, the glass in glass containers and the plastic used for making flexible film and in semi-rigid and rigid containers.
Specifiers and end users are also insisting on a general reduction in the use of packaging materials but so far, unlike in some continental European countries, there is no insistence on making the packaging reusable in its original form, but only through reclamation and recycling. However, recently introduced UK packaging laws have wide ramifications on the operations of the packaging industry, as they are designed to force reductions in packaging and packaging waste. The cost of implementation and compliance will make packaging more expensive and consumers will be affected by these changes.
Key Note expects that the market size for food and drink packaging will grow from an estimated £6.5bn in 1999 to £7.6bn in 2003, giving a total growth of 16.9 percent. Some of the apparent increase in value will be due to additional reprocessing costs that will be recovered from the consumer, and some to a genuine increase in market value as the volume of business slowly grows over the next 5 years, e.g. due to population growth.

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

Executive Summary
Market Definition
MARKET SECTORS
MARKET POSITION
MARKET TRENDS
Market Size
THE TOTAL MARKET
BY MARKET SECTOR
EXPORTS AND IMPORTS
Table 1: The UK Food and Drink Packaging Market by Sector by Value (£bn at msp), 1994 and 1998
Table 2: UK Exports and Imports of Major Packaging Materials by Value (£m), 1998
Table 3: UK Exports of Major Packaging Materials to EU and Non-EU Countries by Value (£m), 1996-1998
Table 4: UK Imports of Major Packaging Materials from EU and Non-EU Countries by Value (£m), 1996-1998
Industry Background
PAPER AND BOARD
PLASTICS
METAL
GLASS
INDUSTRY CONCENTRATION
EMPLOYMENT
TRADE ASSOCIATIONS
Table 5: Number of VAT-Based Enterprises in the UK Packaging Industry by Turnover Size (£000), 1998
Table 6: Number of Local Units in the UK Packaging Industry by Employment Size (number of employees), 1998
Competitor Analysis
PAPER AND BOARD
PLASTICS
METAL
GLASS
Table 7: Selected Leading Manufacturers and Suppliers of Paper and Board Packaging in the UK by Turnover (£m), 1997/1998/1999
Table 8: Selected Leading Manufacturers and Suppliers of Plastic Packaging in the UK by Turnover (£m), 1997/1998/1999
Table 9: Selected Leading Manufacturers and Suppliers of Metal Packaging in the UK by Turnover (£m), 1997/1998
Table 10: Selected Leading Manufacturers and Suppliers of Glass Packaging in the UK by Turnover (£m), 1997/1998
Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities and Threats (SWOT)
PAPER AND BOARD
PLASTICS
METAL
GLASS
Buying Behaviour
PAPER AND BOARD PACKAGING
PLASTIC PACKAGING
METAL PACKAGING
GLASS PACKAGING
Outside Suppliers to the Industry
PAPER AND BOARD
PLASTICS
METAL
GLASS
Current Issues
RECYCLING OF PACKAGING WASTE
PREPACKAGED GOODS
MATERIAL CHOICES
LIFESTYLE
Forecasts
INTRODUCTION
PAPER AND BOARD
PLASTICS
METAL
GLASS
Table 11: Forecast UK Market Size for Food and Drink Packaging by Sector and by Value (£bn at 1999 prices), 1999-2003
Company Profiles
INTRODUCTION
DEFINITIONS
FURTHER INFORMATION
Further Sources
ASSOCIATIONS
PERIODICALS
DIRECTORIES
GENERAL SOURCES
HOPPENSTEDT BONNIER INFORMATION SOURCES
GOVERNMENT PUBLICATIONS
OTHER SOURCES

Text © 1999 Key Note

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