Co-packer puts Sunkist brand front and center

A hot-fill standup pouch with a patented dispensing feature is just one of the innovative packaging formats that Protica is launching under the well-known Sunkist brand.

STANDUP POUCH. Characteristics that mark this standup pouch are consumer convenience, long shelf life, and sustainability advant
STANDUP POUCH. Characteristics that mark this standup pouch are consumer convenience, long shelf life, and sustainability advant

• Sunkist Energy, an energy drink hot-filled in a 2.5-oz heat-set PET bottle
• Sunkist Protein 24, a protein drink with 24 g of protein; they’re packaged in the same heat-set PET as Sunkist Energy
• Sunkist Protein 25 or Sunkist Protein 42, protein drinks with 25 or 42 g of protein; they’re packaged in a 3.2-oz hot-fill “tube” that’s injection molded of polypropylene,
• Sunkist Protein 24 in a multi-serve 1-gal standup pouch featuring The Answer, a patented dispensing technology from International Dispensing Corporation.

The standup pouch is especially intriguing. It holds 48 servings of Sunkist’s highly concentrated protein drink. The pouch’s innovative dispensing technology—combined with hot-filling at 185 deg F and a pouch material structure that includes foil for gas barrier purposes—gives the package a two-year shelf life with no need for refrigeration.

Supplying the pre-made pouches to Protica is Fres-co System USA, which has some past experience working with IDC’s unique dispensing system but never before in a standup pouch application. The pouch structure is an adhesive lamination of polyster/foil/nylon/PE heat seal. The outer layer of polyester is reverse printed gravure in eight colors.

Part of the pouch-making process includes the application of an injection-molded PP fitment. But Fres-co chooses not to describe how the fitment is applied nor will it identify the supplier of the pouch-making equipment it uses. It is through the fitment that Protica fills the pouch. After filling, the dispenser component of the IDC dispensing closure system is snapped onto the fitment.

The construction of IDC’s dispenser component includes a silicon valve, so once it’s snapped onto the fitment of the pouch, a hermetic seal is in effect. Consumers push the black button on the dispenser component to open the silicone valve and release product. When the consumer lets up on the black button, the silicone valve snaps back and hermeticity is restored.

At the end of the day, The Answer is a method of dispensing shelf-stable liquids—which can be aseptically filled or, as in this case, hot-filled—without exposing the remaining contents to bacteria and without recourse to refrigeration or preservatives. It essentially takes the Tetra Pak or Combibloc concept to the next level, because as good as those aseptic packages are, once their hermetic seals are broken and product is dispensed, hermeticity can’t be restored and the remaining shelf life is limited.

Rigorous testing

“We liked this dispensing technology and this pouch approach as soon as we saw it,” says Jim Duffy, Protica president. “It brings consumers tremendous value because they pay less for this product when multiple servings are in a single package. And in-depth life-cycle analysis indicates that bulk packaging like this dramatically reduces the amount of energy, greenhouse gas emissions, and landfill waste compared to a single-serve package. But before we jumped into this, we tested it rigorously.

Only after it passed our in-house microbiological testing did we sign an agreement with IDC. We now have the exclusive right to use it for packaging either protein drinks or energy drinks as long as certain volume requirements are met. This Sunkist pouch is our first commercial introduction of the concept.

“We relied on IDC for sourcing pouches,” continues Duffy. “At first it looked like we were going to have to get them from offshore. But when we realized that the offshore vendor wasn’t going to be able to meet our timeline, we were happy to work with Fres-co. They have a lot of experience making pouches.”

As for BioBev LLC, the startup sales and marketing company that first came to Protica with its idea for a Sunkist-branded energy drink, Duffy now owns a significant portion of it. Also, BioBev has moved from Dublin, OH, and now occupies a part of Protica’s 250,000 sq ft headquarters facility in Whitehall, PA.

Boxed pouches

The pre-made pouches arrive at Protica in boxes. They’re fed into a 12-head filling machine built by Protica. Two filler operators attach 12 pouches on a pre-feed station. When a button is pressed, a mechanical jig picks all twelve pouches and positions them each beneath a filling valve. The 12 filling valves dive down and latch onto the plastic fitment on each pouch. As soon as volumetric filling is complete, the fill heads come up and a second mechanism comes down to press on 12 dispensing components.

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