Plastic Containers¡¡ |¡¡ Metal Containers¡¡ |¡¡ Glass Containers¡¡ | ¡¡Caps & Closures¡¡ | ¡¡Pumps & Sprayers¡¡ |¡¡ Medical Packaging¡¡ |¡¡ Packaging Accessory
 
 
 
Home
About US
Proudcts
FAQ
News
Inquiries
Contact US
¡ù
Plastic PET Bottles
¡ù
Plastic HDPE Bottles
¡ù
Plastic LDPE Bottles
¡ù
Plastic PP Bottles
¡ù
Plastic Jar
¡ù
Bottle Cap & Closures
¡ù
Lotion Pump & Sprayer
¡ù
Aluminum Bottle
¡ù
Aluminum Tin & Metal Can
¡ù
Aluminum Cap & Metal Closure
¡ù
Medicine Bottle & Container
¡ù
Packaging Accessory
¡ù
Glass Bottle & Jar
 
Phone: (+ 86 20) 36681712 
Add:Rm.213,Yaohua Commercial
Building, No.447,Sanyuanli Road,
Yuexiu District,Guangzhou, PRC.
News
glass bottles
Observer wine critic declares boycott of heavyweight glass bottles
Josh Brooks, packagingnews.co.uk, 26 October 2009
 
One of the UK's leading wine critics has declared war on overweight packaging by vowing to boycott wines sold in heavyweight wine bottles from his Sunday newspaper column.
 
Tim Atkin, who is the wine critic for The Observer, declared in his column yesterday that an increasing number of producers were packaging their wines in "disgracefully heavy" bottles.
 
Instead, he encouraged wine buyers to buy wine in bag-in-box, plastic, Tetra Paks or lightweight glass - advice that is likely to upset some in the glass sector, which argues that its products beat those in other materials due to its high rate of recycling.
 
He also suggested that consumers buy wines that are shipped to the UK in bulk and bottled here; this has been one of the key projects of Wrap's Glassrite project, which has helped Waitrose implement a bulk-importing model for its Chilean Virtue wines.
 
Atkin claimed that the problem of overweight bottles was most likely to be found in Spanish, Italian and Argentine wines.
 
He said that in those countries, "anyone who makes an icon wine weems to come over all macho and purchase the thickest glass available".
 
He said: "In an effort to arrest this runaway trend, I've taken the decision not to recommend anything on these pages that comes in a heavyweight bottle... I will not hesitate to name and shame."
 
Champagne and other sparkling wines would, however, still be acceptable in heavy bottles because "the wine style dictates the choice of package".
 
In a series of other tips to keep the carbon footprint of wine drinking as small as possible, Atkin encouraged readers to buy from carbon-neutral wineries or to support the UK's burgeoning wine industry in order to keep transportation to a minimum.
 
 
About Us  |  Proudcts  |  Old Proudcts  |  FAQ  |  News  |  Enquiries  |  Contact Us  |  CatalogueSite Map 
 

E-mail:sales@infullpak.com Tel: 0086-20-36681712
Copyright © Infullpak business Co.,Ltd.. All Rights Reserved