Packaging
March 31, 2026
Across the packaging landscape, a shift once discussed in niche circles is now unmistakably mainstream, paperization, or the substitution of traditional plastic with fiber-based alternatives.
The packaging market’s transition toward paper is underpinned by decades of investment in design, recycling infrastructure and material performance. Today, Europe’s paper and board packaging recycling rate, around 87%, not only surpasses the continent’s legal targets but also outperforms all other packaging materials by weight.
Regulatory frameworks are tightening. The EU’s Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation, PPWR, and the European Union Deforestation Regulation, EUDR, are reshaping how materials are sourced, verified and evaluated. At the same time, consumers increasingly favor packaging that signals environmental responsibility, recyclability and a lower climate footprint. Compliance and corporate purpose are rapidly converging into a single priority for brands.
For many global manufacturers, this means rethinking material choices and supply chains, from the forest to the shelf.
The ecological credibility of paper packaging rests on one essential condition, responsible forest governance. In Europe, strong forestry legislation ensures that harvesting is directly tied to regeneration, biodiversity protection and long-term resource stewardship. These frameworks significantly mitigate deforestation risk and help maintain forests as renewable carbon sinks.

Independent certification systems such as the Forest Stewardship Council, FSC, and the Programme for the Endorsement of Forest Certification, PEFC, provide an additional layer of accountability, ensuring traceability and compliance throughout the supply chain.
With EUDR implementation approaching, traceability is becoming even more critical. The regulation requires companies to demonstrate that wood-based materials placed on the EU market are not linked to deforestation. Preparing for this level of transparency is no longer optional, it is fundamental to operating responsibly in global markets.
Paperization is not simply about replacing one material with another. It represents a broader shift toward circularity, renewable sourcing and measurable ESG performance. Brands that embrace responsibly sourced fiber are better positioned to anticipate regulatory developments, respond to stakeholder scrutiny and reinforce their sustainability commitments with tangible action.
Europe’s mature recycling infrastructure further strengthens this equation, making paper packaging one of the most widely recycled materials available today.
At SWM International, our role in this transition is clear. We design and manufacture ultra-lightweight papers, ranging from 10 to 70 g/m², engineered to reduce material intensity while maintaining functional performance. Lightweighting is one of the most effective levers for lowering environmental impact, using fewer resources without compromising efficiency.
All of our papers are FSC-certified, ensuring that the fiber we source originates from responsibly managed forests. In parallel, we are actively preparing for EUDR requirements by reinforcing traceability systems across our supply chain to guarantee that the wood used in our products does not contribute to deforestation.
Our ultra-lightweight substrates are developed to integrate seamlessly into existing packaging and recycling systems, supporting both sustainability goals and operational performance.
The transition to fiber-based packaging requires collaboration, across design, sourcing, compliance and industrial implementation.
At SWM International, we believe sustainable packaging innovation is built through partnership. We are open to partnership with brands, converters and stakeholders ready to advance responsible, high-performance paper solutions.
Because sustainability in packaging does not start at the shelf, it starts at the source.
Let’s collaborate!