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Grounded Packaging
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Ozone Coffee
A B Corp roaster reversed course on compostables, switched to a single mono-material PCR pouch, and used packaging as a margin lever during the worst coffee-price crisis in decades.
Ozone Coffee is one of the most respected speciality roasters in the UK and New Zealand, known for their long-term commitment to sustainability, community impact, and responsible sourcing. A certified B Corp since 2022 and winner of Most Sustainable Brand at the European Coffee Awards (2024), Ozone approaches every part of its business, from farming partners to packaging, with a systems-thinking approach.
Grounded first connected with Ozone in 2021. Since then, we’ve supported the brand across several phases of their packaging evolution, helping them shift from virgin plastic to compostable films in 2022 and now into high-performance mono-material flat-bottom pouches made from 70% post-consumer recycled (PCR) content.
The result: a packaging system that is more sustainable, reduces cost, and is better suited to the realities of their retail, wholesale, and subscription channels.
Post-consumer recycled content in the new pouch.
Reduction in subscription postage costs.
Single packaging format across retail, wholesale, ecom and subscription.
Moving to recyclable PCR pouches saved approximately 6,394 kg CO₂ per 100,000 pouches for Ozone Coffee weighted across material, logistics, and end-of-life impact categories per comparative LCA.
Across 100,000 units that's 509 kg of material avoided every year. Less material means lower freight, lower per-unit cost, and a smaller carbon footprint.
"We believe in progress over perfection. The most sustainable option isn't always the most obvious one."
— Sarushka Reddy, Head of Marketing, Ozone Coffee

In 2022, Ozone Coffee championed compostable packaging as they transitioned away from virgin polyethylene. By 2024, they were back to the drawing board.
The reason was simple. Most UK and New Zealand households can't access industrial composting. Bags labelled "compostable" were ending up in landfill, where the polymers break down anaerobically and produce methane, a more potent greenhouse gas than CO₂. This is the exact outcome the switch from virgin PE was meant to avoid. The barrier performance of compostable films also couldn’t reliably protect coffee aromatics across a meaningful shelf life.
"We moved away from compostables after championing them, which wasn't comfortable, but it was the right call," says Sarushka Reddy, Head of Marketing at Ozone. "The goal is to reduce impact, not to defend a previous decision."
The timing made the decision urgent rather than optional. Between October 2023 and November 2025, ICO Composite green coffee prices more than doubled, peaking at 354.32 US cents/lb in February, the highest monthly prices on record. Freight stayed elevated post-pandemic. UK postal rates climbed. With the cost of green coffee outside their control, Ozone needed every other line in the operation to work harder. Packaging was one of the bigger levers available.
"When coffee prices doubled, we couldn't compromise on quality or sustainability. We had to find efficiencies everywhere else. The packaging transition wasn't just about environmental impact; it was about building a more resilient business."
— Alex Walsh Production Manager, Ozone Coffee
Ozone's previous system ran two separate formats across two channels: a premium flat-bottom pouch for retail and wholesale, and a lightweight stand-up pouch for ecommerce and subscriptions. With 25+ Blends and Single Origins running at any given time, that doubled the SKU count through every part of the operation: ordering, dispatch, warehousing, and forecasting.
The brief for the new system was specific:

Grounded developed a single dual-purpose flat-bottom pouch in mono-material PCR, 70% post-consumer recycled food-safe LDPE. It's engineered to stand on a shelf with the presence Ozone's wholesale customers expect, and to flatten into Royal Mail’s Large Letter envelope (353 x 250 x 25mm, max 750g) when filled at subscription weights.
"Previously, we just couldn't do that with the compostable material. PCR gave us a format that's letterboxable for ecom but still stands up nicely on a shelf for wholesale. It gets us a better price and streamlines the operation."
— Alex Walsh Production Manager, Ozone Coffee
The pouch is recyclable through soft-plastic collection schemes that already operate in both markets: Tesco, Sainsbury’s, and Co-op front-of-store points in the UK, and the 290+ public drop-off locations in the New Zealand Soft Plastics Recycling Scheme. The UK government’s Simpler Recycling regulations require local authorities to collect plastic films at kerbside from 31 March 2027, extending the recycling pathway from supermarket drop-offs into home collection.
The second piece was operational. Grounded's managed inventory model, already in place for Ozone NZ, is now rolling out in the UK. Ozone draws stock as needed and is invoiced monthly based on usage, rather than paying for full inventory upfront, which had previously tied up capital and warehouse space.
"The finance team is excited about monthly invoicing instead of large upfront costs. It frees up capital for other parts of the business and eliminates the warehouse-space constraints we'd been managing around."
— Alex Walsh Production Manager, Ozone Coffee

*Based on an average of 100,000 pouches per year.
“There’s nothing worse than getting home and you’ve missed your coffee delivery because it couldn’t fit in the letterbox.”
— Alex Walsh, Production Manager, Ozone Coffee

Ozone's packaging evolution shows what happens when sustainability decisions are made against the infrastructure that exists, rather than the one that should exist. Compostables made sense on paper. PCR mono-material made sense in practice. The cost win and the carbon win came from the same decision.
For specialty roasters managing the same green-coffee crisis, and for premium food brands more broadly, packaging is one of the few line items where a single change can do four jobs at once: cut cost, improve product, simplify operations, and reduce real-world impact.
"Start by being honest about what your current packaging actually does in the real world, not just what it's designed to do in ideal conditions. Talk to the people who manage waste infrastructure. And don't be afraid to change your mind if better evidence comes along."
— Sarushka Reddy, Head of Marketing, Ozone Coffee
By partnering with Grounded Packaging, Ozone Coffee’s packaging has contributed to kelp and mangrove restoration projects across Indonesia, Cambodia, Palos Verdes, and Southern California.
Scope is Grounded’s lifecycle assessment platform. It generates verified lifecycle data for any flexible packaging format, the same data that underpins the carbon claims in this case study.