RevivePack develops molded fiber food packaging using materials with no intentionally added PFAS. Our agricultural fiber materials and PFAS documentation work support commercial foodservice review and food-contact documentation.
PFAS-Free Packaging
PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances) have historically been used in some food-contact packaging to improve foodservice use. Because many PFAS are persistent and increasingly scrutinized, regulators and procurement teams across North America are moving toward non-fluorinated food packaging alternatives.
Current materials are being developed with no intentionally added PFAS, with screening and documentation planning in progress. RevivePack's materials are positioned for selected foodservice applications while supporting food-contact review and third-party testing planning.
For foodservice operators, packaging buyers, investors, and industrial customers, PFAS-related transition planning requires material documentation, regulatory awareness, and credible validation status.
Why PFAS Matters
PFAS have been used in some conventional food packaging materials to support selected foodservice applications. Many compounds in this class are persistent in the environment, and scientific and regulatory attention continues to increase around their use in food-contact materials.
Regulatory agencies in the U.S., Canada, and Europe continue to review, restrict, or phase out certain PFAS uses in food packaging. This is accelerating demand for non-fluorinated food packaging supported by testing and supplier documentation.
Food packaging buyers are increasingly asking suppliers to document no intentionally added PFAS, testing protocols, and food-contact status. Requirements vary by jurisdiction and customer program, so RevivePack is building its documentation program with procurement and regulatory review in mind.
Transitioning to packaging with no intentionally added PFAS can help foodservice teams plan around changing policy requirements while reviewing molded fiber options by application.
RevivePack's Approach
We evaluate materials for foodservice applications with no intentionally added PFAS. Development is guided by commercial requirements, documentation objectives, and manufacturing planning.
PFAS screening, food-contact review, and third-party testing are part of the documentation work as materials advance. RevivePack is developing customer documentation for buyers, investors, and procurement teams.
Current materials are being developed with no intentionally added PFAS, with screening and documentation planning built into the work. The focus is molded fiber formats for foodservice applications and manufacturing planning.
Request material information, development samples, and available testing updates for molded fiber food packaging with no intentionally added PFAS.