Product name | Hamburger wrapping paper |
Brand Name | OEM |
Place of Origin | China |
Usage | Hamburger wrapper |
Size | Customzied |
Sheet | 20/30/40/50 sheets |
Material | Stone paper |
Color | Customzied |
MOQ | 10000 pc |
Logo | Customized Logo |
Advantages | Grease-proof |

1. Why did stone paper receive a cradle to cradle certificate?
Stone paper is cradle to cradle certified by the official cradle to cradle Institute. The paper has a silver cradle to cradle label. On the right you can see what valuation was given to different aspects of the paper production.
Cradle to cradle literally means there is no ‘grave’ for the product after it has been used. The material does not need to leave any waste behind after usage, but can be properly recycled.
2. How to recycle stone paper?
Stone paper is made from original stonep powder and can thus be recycled easily.
In theory, stonepaper is infinitely recyclable. If there were a stonepaper recycling stream, we would be able to fully re-use all stonepaper. However, in practice this still works a bit different, mainly due to a lack of sufficient volume for an own recycling stream.
We advise you to throw away stone paper, with plastic recycling (stream 2). This way, the paper can be fully incorporated in an existing recycling stream. The Calcium Carbonate (the stone that is used) is already a common additive to some plastic products and will thus be properly recycled.
Stonepaper will be recognized as a non-pulppaper product in most recycling streams that we know of. It will thus be filtered out with other products that are not recyclable in a paper recycling stream. Then, it will be processed according to the facilities rules. Sometimes this means that it will be burned, or that it will be sorted and used in proper plastic recycling. The stonepaper will in fact be recognized as a plastic-type product.
Just to make sure – we recommend you recycle stone paper with plastic recycling.
3. Will the HDPE in stone paper be replaced with bioplastic?
A lot of research and development is done to continuously improve the sustainability of the stonepaper and its production process.
Tests are being done with bioplastic replacing the HDPE component of the stonepaper. This will most likely be a bioplastic variety that is not made from a food resource, but for example from non-consumable weeds.
At this moment, the HDPE component is made from partly recycled plastic.