News & Press: Glass news

Microplastics found in contents of glass bottles

23 June 2025   (3 Comments)
Posted by: David Moore

Amber bottles seen from above

Microplastics found in contents of glass bottles

"Drinks including water, soda, beer and wine sold in glass bottles contain more microplastics than those in plastic bottles, according to a surprising study released by France's food safety agency," was the leading sentence of a news item published by Phys.org based on a publication ANSES Laboratoire de Sécurité des Aliments, France.

Microplastic contaminations in a set of beverages sold in France found in beverages packaged in glass are similar to those found for cans and bricks/beverage cartons, and also for plastic water bottles. 

The main source of microplastics in the glass bottled beverages was reported to be paint from closures/caps. When the bottles are filled, the caps are placed by a process where there is potential for mechanical stress/friction, resulting in polyester based paint chips. These paint fragments can then accumulate on the inner side of the caps, and that is how it gets into the bottle. So the source is linked to the filling process and painted caps. Some simple cleaning procedures saw significant reductions in this contamination source.

Glass bottled beverages were also found to contain polyolefin microplastics which could originate from cold-end coatings used to lubricate the passage of the bottles. Levels were higher for wider mouth containers compared to beer, etc. Lowering the spray nozzles would reduce the chances of lubricant residues entering the bottle.

The size of microplastics measured in this study were 30–500 µm, several orders of magnitude bigger than the nanoplastics which have been absorbed into the body.

The glass industry (FEVE) and ANSES are exchanging ideas to gain a better understanding of the problem and work on concrete and effective solutions, some of which have already been considered by the team of researchers behind the study.

Comments...

David Moore says...
Posted 26 June 2025
FEVE has added: The glass industry acknowledges the study released last week by the French National Agency for Food, Environmental, and Occupational Health and Safety (ANSES). The study investigates the presence of microplastics across different types of beverage containers (i.e. plastic, cartons, cans, and glass) in drinks such as water, soda, iced tea, wine and beer. The study is clear that the level of microplastics found in the bottles tested is linked to the metal caps/closures of the bottles, and not from glass packaging itself. Glass is a reference packaging material for health, safety and taste preservation, glass is a virtually inert packaging material and, as the ANSES study confirms, it does not release microplastics. Glass does not react chemically with food or drinks that it contains. The health and safety of consumers is our highest priority. As glass packaging industry we are strongly committed to collaborating with the value chain partners to address this.
David Moore says...
Posted 26 June 2025
Mr Vinit Kapur, Secretary- AIGMF, said, “Glass and plastics are fundamentally distinct materials. Glass bottles are manufactured from abundant natural ingredients such as silica sand and cullet (recycled glass), through a high-temperature process that does not involve the use or formation of plastics. The glass manufacturing units are entirely free of plastic production. When plastic particles are observed in beverages packaged in glass bottles, these particles are attributed to external components like caps and closures, specifically those involving painted metal surfaces, plastic liners, or sealing compounds.”
David Moore says...
Posted 26 June 2025
Mr Rajesh Khosla, President- AIGMF said: “The Glass Industry Officials unfortunately were not consulted before making this study public. We request respected members of the media, stakeholders and public to verify the source of the information cited and understand the manufacturing process of glass bottles to avoid spreading any misleading information on Glass, which has been a trusted mode of packaging since ancient times.’’

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