AT&T is sweet on sugarcane-based thermoform

Renewable-resource film to be used in the thermoformed part of the clamshell package in which AT&T merchandises more than 300 SKUs of its wireless accessories products.

The unique patented ‘trapped clamshell’.
The unique patented ‘trapped clamshell’.

Late in 2011, a new material came into use for the clear clamshells thermoformed by Display Pack® for all of AT&T’s branded wireless accessories. Called TerraPET® and supplied by Klöckner Pentaplast, the new material is composed of 30% renewable-resource content. TerraPET, says Klöckner Pentaplast, is sourced from ethanol harvested from natural sugar cane. It makes it possible to replace fossil fuel-based material with an alternative without sacrificing any of the high-performance qualities—including clarity—of APET.


It’s not that the AT&T Accessible Pack® wasn’t “green” already. The thermoformed part that preceded the TerraPET part was already made from Recycled PET (RPET) with approximately 30 to 60% recycled pre-consumer content. But early in 2011, TESSCO, AT&T’s distributor that works directly with its product marketing and supply chain teams, put out the call for packaging material that is even greener.


“AT&T wanted increased content of recyclable or plant-based material,” says Kate Varner, category manager for packaging at TESSCO. Adds Michael Cowan, AT&T’s accessories business director, “For the past three or four years, we have done different things to become more sustainable and minimize the company’s environmental impact. We are always asking, ‘What can we do next?’”


The most recent answer to that question is TerraPET. The transition to TerraPET film began on October 2, 2011. The film is sourced from ethanol harvested from natural sugarcane. A single planting will yield two to four harvests, making it a rapidly renewable agricultural crop. That’s one of the things that make it such an attractive alternative to fossil-based material.


It permits the replacement of a third of the fossil fuels traditionally used in AT&T’s accessory packaging. AT&T is the first U.S. telecom company to use this plastic in its packaging. According to Klöckner’s Peter Gianniny, business manager for thermoforming films, TerraPet is a good example of offerings brought to market by Klöckner to help customers meet their sustainable packaging goals.


“Before advancing TerraPET film, we did a great deal of research. We reviewed the full spectrum of options,” says TESSCO’s Varner. “We saw a lot of clamshell samples made from alternative materials. We narrowed it down to the three or four best for presentation to AT&T. Whereas the other samples displayed such negatives as being cloudy or brittle—tending to crack, break, scratch, or discolor—TerraPET film had no such cons.” Among the “pros” sought, Varner lists these: performance, dependability, and clarity.


The sample clamshells were developed by Display Pack, the thermoformer and patent holder of the Accessible Pack. Says Marty Tidball, senior national accounts manager for the company, “With TerraPET film, we are able to use the same tooling and heat-seal machinery. We didn’t need new equipment of any kind.” Concurs AT&T’s Cowan, “Compared to TerraPET film, the other clamshell samples weren’t the same thing. They didn’t look as good. But TerraPET film appeared exactly like the RPET we’d been using.”

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