Tetra Pak AI investment to enhance sorting of food and beverage cartons

Tetra Pak has confirmed a further round of investment to upgrade food and beverage carton sorting capabilities in the UK, including the installation of AI-powered optical sorting technology for the first time in the UK.

Tetra Pak financed the production and installation of innovative AI-powered optical sorting technology at Cumbria Waste Management’s materials recycling facility (MRF) in Carlisle, in collaboration with British technology start-up, Recycleye. The technology, known as Recycleye QuantiSort®, uses AI and cameras to detect beverage cartons within the mixed materials waste stream, and pneumatic valves are then used to eject them so that they can be sent on to be recycled. The system can more easily be trained to sort cartons than traditional sorting methods, and is achieving over 98% purity of carton output.

This upgrade will enable Cumbria Waste Management to increase the sorting of food and beverage cartons for recycling. The company serves a large area across North West England, including Cumberland Council and Westmorland & Furness Council, alongside many parts of Scotland.

A further two UK MRFs have received funding to upgrade their food and beverage carton sorting technology, bringing Tetra Pak’s total investment in UK sorting infrastructure in 2025 to £1.4 million. In May it was announced that J&B Recycling in Hartlepool had been the first site to be upgraded with the addition of two new robotic sorting arms, a different technology that is also produced by Recycleye. A third and final site will be confirmed later this year.

The investment site marks a milestone in Tetra Pak’s long-standing work in collaboration with legislators and local authorities to improve the collection, sorting and recycling of food and beverage cartons in the UK.

This work in the UK is part of Tetra Pak’s wider annual commitment of over £34m per year to expand food and beverage carton collection, sorting and recycling infrastructure globally, in collaboration with stakeholders across the value chain. Of this, £2.4m from Tetra Pak has been ringfenced specifically for infrastructure to sort food and beverage cartons in the UK. This investment comes ahead of the introduction of the government’s Simpler Recycling policy for households in March 2026.

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