Change is a constant in any business. But some changes are easier to adapt to than others, and those working in the packaging industry know this better than most.

VB headshot 2025.pngAhead of her appearance at London Packaging Week, Victoria Brownlie MBE, chief policy & sustainability officer at the British Beauty Council, discusses what the continuing wave of regulatory changes means for today’s beauty brands.

Packaging is a sector in transition. Regulations like extended producer responsibility (EPR) reforms, the EU’s Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), and the UK’s Plastic Packaging Tax (PPT) are at various stages of implementation, making the 2020s a decade of disruption for packaging. And, as virtually every business on the planet relies on packaging somewhere in its supply chain, that disruption has a far-reaching impact.

Victoria Brownlie MBE is almost uniquely well-qualified to talk about this topic. Her background in UK politics, PR, and the beauty industry gives her insights into both the regulatory challenges facing cosmetics brands today – and how to adapt and thrive in industries defined by them.

 

Cost is driving circularity

Speaking ahead of London Packaging Week, where she will be part of a panel discussion titled Great British Beauty Clean Up: From Waste to Responsibility.

“We’ve seen a bit of stagnation across our industry since the plastic packaging tax and the initial implementation of extended producer responsibility regulations came in,” she says. “Many in the industry felt like they were slapped in the face by all of this new regulatory compliance. And they started panicking and simply filled in all the compliance paperwork, paid the taxes and moved on.

“The panic has subsided. And now brands are actually starting to open their eyes and look at what they could be doing differently in order to try and bring those costs down.”

As ever, the initial shock created the conditions for innovation. What started as simply filing paperwork is evolving into a smarter approach that involves redesigning systems as part of an effort to cut compliance costs.

As Victoria highlights, circularity has to be commercially viable to be successful. She argues sustainability has transformed from a moral or reputational issue to a commercial one, and beauty brands, having leveraged sustainability claims for a long time, are ready to lead the way.

“Brands are now much more open to exploring other areas to make savings. Without being too dreary about it, other costs to their business, like taxation and energy prices, have increased significantly over the last two years because of the economic climate, labour policy and so on.

“They can bring down taxes in other ways by looking at strategies like buying at scale to bring the cost down and exploring them in greater depth.” This may mean trawling through old emails and contacts to restart lapsed conversations. “Where doors may have felt closed previously, these packaging innovators should be trying to open them again, because I do think that the landscape has changed, and it’s an opportunity for a fresh conversation.”

At London Packaging Week, Victoria will be part of one of these conversations, live on the Luxury stage – one of thousands of insightful conversations that will take place inside the Excel throughout the show. And the value of these conversations is evident in the progress that has already been made.

DSC 4558 Innovation without compromise

In previous years, sustainable beauty packaging required a trade-off in cost, product protection, presentation, or consumer experience. Victoria notes that this is beginning to change: “I think we’re moving into an era of innovation without compromise. Previously, it might have been, ‘oh, you can have this new packaging and this new innovation, but the cost to the consumer will be slightly higher.’ Or, ‘you can have this innovation, but the look and feel of the packaging isn’t as ‘premium’ in order for it to be fully recyclable or compostable.’

“Now, the latest wave of innovation means we don’t always have to forego something in order to be more environmentally conscious in packaging design.”

The other significant shift is cultural. Beauty, like many consumer goods sectors, has historically been highly competitive, protective and fragmented. But Victoria believes that is changing as brands recognise the scale of the packaging challenge.

“There is definitely more going on behind the scenes with pacts and alliances and coalitions working together,” she says.

That mindset was central to the British Beauty Council’s decision to establish its Sustainable Beauty Coalition, which was created following the Council’s Courage to Change report in 2020.

“That report identified all of the fantastic work that’s being done in the industry, as well as the impact that it’s making in both a positive and a negative sense,” Victoria explains. “But most of this work is happening in a silo. And if businesses were just talking to each other a little bit more and sharing ideas of successes and failures, then we’d actually be streets ahead in terms of packaging innovation.”

Small problems, big challenges

This is where major industry events become a forum for shared understanding. Victoria sees London Packaging Week as an important space for informal, open-ended conversations that may not happen in more rigid commercial settings.

“Events like London Packaging Week are essential to that, to keep these conversations going in a setting where you’re not necessarily having formal meetings or committing to anything,” she says. “It’s about taking valuable opportunities to have more relaxed conversations about a brand or supplier. You can find what a potential partner or innovation is about, why it’s different, where the innovation is now compared to five years ago, and how it can actually solve the challenges that you are looking to solve.”

The need for collaboration becomes even clearer when looking at some of beauty packaging’s most difficult formats. Many products are small, multi-component, and functionally complex, which makes them difficult to recycle through conventional systems.

“A lot of our packaging products, outside of shampoos and body lotions etc., fall within that hard-to-recycle category,” Victoria says. “You’re never going to be able to get a lipstick bigger than the size of a finger. Yes, it would be more easily recyclable, but completely impractical in terms of consumer use.”

One common example captures this challenge better than most: A simple pump.

“With a pump, you’ve got the head, the pipe, the spring, the mechanism, and then the bottle, potentially the wrapping, and then the box it comes in. All of those components represent a different recycling challenge,” she explains.

“I continue to get hugely frustrated that the pump is probably the single most used component of beauty packaging, yet we still, as an industry, haven’t managed to solve this problem at scale.” For Victoria, this is precisely the type of challenge that demands a different way of working. It cannot be solved by incremental tweaks or isolated trials alone.

“There could be a programme where we come together as an industry and say, right, we’re going to solve one single issue that is the biggest thorn in our side. For me, that would be the pump. And all of us are going to jointly invest and resource solutions to this problem.”

Victoria is clear that the industry must continue to come together and drive progress forward. “We can’t ignore that we are producing 120 billion units of packaging a year,” she says. “Solution based innovation needs to be factored into overall running costs so that we are not simply continuing to create a problem for another day, but actively investing in solving it at source.”

JOB5149W 505A wider ecosystem

At the same time, Victoria stresses that sustainable principles should continue to be deeply embedded in the wider business ecosystem. UK manufacturing capacity, export confidence, education and talent development all affect the sector’s ability to innovate.

“A big issue in packaging and manufacturing is the lack of homegrown UK manufacturing” she says. “A lot is now made overseas or split across countries and assembled elsewhere.”

At the same time, future skills are critical. “People think of beauty as retail or salon roles, but manufacturers, cosmetic scientists and packaging innovators are essential to the future. If we get manufacturing, trade, education and talent pipelines right, that directly feeds into sustainability,” Victoria says. “You need markets and talent to fund sustainability progress.”

That is why this year’s London Packaging Week feels particularly timely. The sector has moved through its initial shock, absorbed the first wave of compliance, and is now looking outward for practical answers. It is seeking new suppliers, new collaborators and new models of innovation.

“Events like London Packaging Week are vital because they establish new conversations,” Victoria concludes. “Just because you’ve always worked with a supplier doesn’t mean it’s still the best choice.

“That window is open. Take the opportunity while it’s there.”

Register now to attend Victoria Brownlie MBE’s session, along with dozens more insightful talks, at London Packaging Week 2026.

For the latest packaging news please visit: https://convertermag.com/category/latest-news/\