APCO and COFOSS join forces to tackle EPS
The Australian Packaging Covenant Organisation (APCO) has entered into a new partnership with the Coalition for Sustainable Solutions (COFOSS) to address one of the most persistent challenges in electronics packaging: expanded polystyrene (EPS).
Lightweight and effective for protecting appliances during transport, EPS remains challenging for consumers to recycle.
The partnership unites APCO’s national stewardship expertise and COFOSS’s deep understanding of the consumer electronics and home appliance sectors. It builds on APCO’s Action Plan for Problematic and Unnecessary Single-Use Plastic Packaging and its Roadmap to Implement the National Phase Out of Business-to-Consumer EPS Packaging, which outlines APCO’s goal to phase out problematic business-to-consumer (B2C) EPS formats while advancing viable recovery and recycling pathways.
The collaboration also aligns with the objectives of the Australian Government’s National Plastics Plan.
“This is a clear signal that industry is stepping up to take meaningful action on one of Australia’s most challenging packaging materials,” said APCO CEO Chris Foley. “Expanded polystyrene has long been difficult to recycle, and solving it requires a coordinated, evidence-based response.”
Foley said collaboration with COFOSS would bring scale and focus to the issue.
“By working with COFOSS, APCO is combining the scale of more than 2400 members across the packaging value chain with the specialist knowledge of electronics and appliance brands. It’s the kind of cooperation Australia needs to build a truly circular economy.”
COFOSS Chair and Managing Director Electrolux Australia and New Zealand Kurt Hegvold said the partnership represents a practical, solution-focused approach.
“COFOSS is proud to partner with APCO, contributing deep industry insights on expanded polystyrene use and recovery to help shape scalable, effective stewardship solutions,” Hegvold said. “Our sector plays a vital role in addressing the environmental impacts of packaging. By combining our understanding of product protection and recovery challenges with APCO’s national framework, we can advance viable alternatives and improve recycling outcomes.”
Hegvold said the collaboration reflects the shared responsibility required to drive meaningful change.
“This is about delivering real outcomes, supporting brands and retailers to meet their responsibilities, reducing waste across supply chains, and ensuring the sector remains part of the solution as Australia transitions to a circular economy.”
Under the agreement, APCO will provide expertise across the packaging life cycle, from stewardship and circular design to strengthening end markets for recovered materials.
COFOSS will lead engagement across the electronics and appliance sectors, contribute collection and recovery data on EPS, and ensure industry voices directly inform future solutions.
Together, APCO and COFOSS will develop practical, evidence-based recommendations on the design, governance and funding of circular systems for electronics packaging.
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