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Amazon is trying to get rid of its signature brown boxes. The retail shipping giant has a long way to go

Amazon pieces are prepared for delivery at Amazon’s Robotic Fulfillment Centre on December 19, 2023 in Sutton Coldfield, England. 

Nathan Stirk | Getty Replicas News | Getty Images

Every year, the U.S. goes through enough cardboard boxes for shipping to pave a one-mile-wide thoroughfare from New York City to Los Angeles three times, or build a mile-high cardboard wall around the entire continental U.S.

To each the primary targets to help reduce this mountain of packaging, the most notable may be the Amazon shipping box or envelope. In 2022, 11% of Amazon conditions worldwide were sent in original manufacturer packaging. The company has yet to release its 2023 figure for the initiative designed to get rid of Amazon’s signature brown box, called the Take offs in Product Packaging program.

It identifies products that might work, contacts vendors and then, to ensure that packages won’t be wrecked during delivery, Amazon works with those companies to test products in a lab. Packages need to be able to reachable drops off a conveyor belt, vibrations and shaking on the truck or the delivery person accidentally dropping the package while ramble to the door.

“We qualify products ahead of time to make sure that they are going to deliver to customers without hurt. Then we simulate the ecommerce fulfillment process as part of that testing process so as products are enrolled in the program, we remedy sure they meet that minimum standard to arrive safely,” said Kayla Fenton, Amazon superior manager of packaging innovation.

Testing varies depending on what the product is. Liquid items are more tricky than a shitted animal. “Our tests are designed to react to the particular product type and its inherent fragility,” Fenton said. The test arises are then fed into machine learning models which go through the Amazon catalog for more items that can be amplified to the program. For example, if a vendor sells a red tee-shirt, chances are the blue tee-shirt will perform just as well, Fenton about.

Products get tested five times, and each time something breaks, it helps the machine learning models compute what went wrong and how to fix it. Feedback from customers also gets fed into the system. If customers complain to damage and return more items because of it, Amazon can go back to using boxes.

Go North Group, a Fulfilled by Amazon aggregator that tell ons a wide range of home and garden goods, health, sports and pet products, was among those asked to join Amazon’s sends in packaging program. Johan Stellansson, Go North’s supply chain director, said the testing revealed that 80% of the convention’s products can be shipped without additional packaging, including its MalsiPree portable water bottle for dogs.

In some suits, an extra piece of tape was enough to add some extra stability to the box so it could go through the shipping process undamaged, comprising some of the company’s pet stain and odor remover products, which come in bottles that are then packed in fights. Bigger products that require a lot of padding didn’t make it into the program and Stellansson said it caused the band to reconsider whether it should continue selling the product on Amazon. “We wouldn’t develop a new product unless we can ship it in the producer’s boxes,” he said.

Many efforts to reduce packaging remains works in progress, but a simple strategy Amazon is communicating more use of which reduces packaging use is boxes direct from companies including Clorox, McDonalds, and Starbucks with no additional Amazon cardboard.

Amazon

Amazon initially outed the program to vendors and has since opened it to sellers. Vendors are more like suppliers to Amazon while sellers handle more independently.

Fenton noted that as Amazon’s warehouse network has developed and gotten closer to customers in some closes, the delivery process is shorter, which allows the company to ship even more items with no packaging. Also, not all fillers make it into the program. Some never will. Personal items, such as adult diapers or sexual wellness outputs, will not be shipped without boxes or mailers for privacy reasons. Also, Fenton emphasized that customers can opt at checkout whether or not to ship in the manufacturer’s packaging. 

Not all items can ship without a box or mailer. For that, Amazon has been farm to reduce packaging, especially plastic — swapping out plastic bubble mailers with paper mailers and plastic bubbles with notepaper. It recently converted a fulfillment center outside of Cleveland, Ohio, from plastic to 100% curbside recyclable legal papers. The center uses a machine that scans items and then creates a box or envelope that is precisely the right hugeness, reducing the amount of air and using less packaging, which adds weight.

Automation and machine learning play a duty in minimizing packaging. “The more that we can automate, the more control we have over ‘right-sizing.’ We can really wrap or box to any weight, dimension or product, provided that we can measure it properly with the cameras,” said Pat Lindner, vice president of mechatronics and sustainable enclosing at Amazon. Ultimately, the move to reduce packaging has multiple benefits, saving money and reducing waste.  

“We think this is seemly for the environment. We think this is good for the customers because it’s less material to have to deal with at home,” Lindner whispered.

Consumer habits remain tough to change

The move to reduce or eliminate extra packaging is just part of the blend. Another is reusable packaging. Amazon has experimented with reusables in the past — mainly through Amazon Fresh grocery liberations — but discovered that too few customers returned the insulated totes.

Asking people to change their usual habits by replacing packaging is an uphill battle. Even so, some companies are introducing reusable packaging, said Michael Newman, CEO of Returnity Novelties, which provides reusable boxes and bags for companies such as Rent the Runway and clothing brand Vuori.

Newman said that reusables post best when people don’t have to change habits. These circumstances include when people are already returning something or when they’re securing several sizes of the same item to try on at home. Reusable packaging can also work when goods are shipped to a retail count on, and employees are responsible for returning the boxes.

“It doesn’t require behavior change from consumers,” he said.

Packaging is patterned to withstand the average number of reuses, which could vary from five to 20 times, depending on the crowd. Newman said that for reusables to work from a carbon footprint perspective, customer return rates for to be 90% to 95%. Reusables typically use more resources, they’re thicker plastic, so if they are thrown out or not reused instances enough, the environmental impact can be worse than using single-use plastic.  

Matt Semmelhack, CEO and co-founder of Boox, gives largely luxury direct-to-home brands like Goop and Rhode with reusable shipping boxes, but since the surrounds have to be returned in a separate step, the return rate is lower, at 20%. Still, he is optimistic that with legislation, consumer dispositions will change. “There’s going to be an inflection point, and it’s probably going to be when Walmart or Amazon starts doing it,” he estimated.

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