THE INDUSTRY'S PACKAGING CHALLENGE
Post-consumer plastic recyclate — PET flakes, HDPE regrind, PP scraps — is irregular, variable in density, and flows unpredictably. That creates a specific problem on the filling line: standard bulk bags lose their shape mid-fill, trapping air and leaving the bag's volume under-used. An under-filled bag means you ship less per load, and it sits unstable in storage on top of that.
For distributors supplying recycling facilities, this is the difference between a bag that works on the line and one that causes stoppages. When a bag needs repositioning between fills, the filling line stops. A better operator can't fix that — the bag construction has to.
WHAT'S TYPICALLY PACKED
The recycling applications India Pack supplies bags for include:
- PET flakes and crushed bottles (post-consumer)
- HDPE regrind and pellets
- PP scraps, film, and granules
- Mixed post-consumer plastic recyclate
These are lower-density, irregular materials compared to minerals or food powders, which makes bag construction and fill behaviour central to getting these right.
RECOMMENDED BAG TYPES FOR THIS INDUSTRY
Baffle FIBC (Q-Bag) — the primary recommendation for plastic recyclate
The baffle construction holds the bag in a square profile throughout filling, regardless of how irregularly the material flows. Die-cut holes in the baffle panels let material reach all four corners evenly, eliminating trapped air and maximising fill volume. For recycling facilities running automated filling lines, this means line stability, consistent fill weights, and no manual bag-steadying between cycles. This is the construction we used to solve exactly this problem for one of our recycling-sector clients — and the reason it's the first recommendation here.
View Baffle FIBC BagsStandard 4-Panel FIBC — for cleaner, more flowable recyclate streams
Where the material is more uniform in size and flows predictably (pelletised regrind, sorted flake), a standard 4-panel bag is a viable lower-cost option. The trade-off is some loss of form stability; for recycling facilities where shape retention matters less than throughput, it's often the right call.
UV-Stabilised FIBC — for outdoor staging and collection
Post-consumer plastic recyclate is frequently staged outdoors before collection or transport. Standard PP fabric degrades under prolonged UV exposure; UV-stabilised fabric maintains strength and integrity across outdoor dwell time. If your customers store or stage filled bags outside, UV treatment is worth specifying.
Not sure which construction suits your customers' application? Tell us what material they're handling and how their line runs — we'll recommend the right bag.
INDUSTRY-SPECIFIC REQUIREMENTS
Form stability on automated lines
Recycling facilities running high-throughput filling lines need bags that behave predictably. A bag that bulges, tips, or needs repositioning mid-fill is a line stoppage. Bag construction — specifically baffle geometry and fabric weight relative to fill density — determines whether the bag earns its place on that line.
Volume utilisation
Post-consumer recyclate doesn't settle as uniformly as minerals or granulated food ingredients. Without baffles holding the corners open, material gathers at the centre and the bag's rated volume goes partly unused. Over hundreds of fills a month, that's a real cost in transport and storage efficiency — and it's the point your recycling-facility customers feel most directly.
UV stability for outdoor applications
Where bags are filled and then staged outside for collection, UV degradation is a real failure mode. PP woven fabric loses tensile strength under sustained UV exposure; UV-stabilised fabric is the correct spec for outdoor dwell times beyond a few days.
Fabric weight vs. fill density
Plastic recyclate is lighter than minerals but can still vary significantly in bulk density depending on how it's processed. Over-specifying fabric weight adds unnecessary cost; under-specifying risks failure under the actual load. We calculate the right GSM for the application before quoting.
No food-grade or UN certification required
Standard plastic recyclate is non-hazardous and non-food-contact. Neither UN certification nor food-grade liner is required for these applications — specifying them adds cost without benefit. Where a client's recyclate stream includes any classified hazardous component, that changes the certification requirement; confirm the material classification at the specification stage.
HOW INDIA PACK SERVES THE RECYCLING INDUSTRY
Distributors supplying recycling facilities need bags that work on their customers' lines — not bags that work in general. That means the specification has to match the actual material, the actual fill method, and the actual density. We calculate the right fabric weight and construction for the specific recyclate stream before a factory quotes it.
Our network includes facilities with experience producing baffle FIBCs to the construction precision that recyclate filling lines demand. Where a standard bag is sufficient, we source it efficiently. Where the application needs something engineered to the material — as with irregular post-consumer plastic — we have the track record of doing exactly that.
Supplier certifications relevant to your order — factories building to ISO 21898, plus additional documentation on request — are obtained and documented for you as part of every shipment. You don't chase factories for paperwork; it arrives with the goods.