Key Facts:
- TerraCycle's Loop reuse platform has achieved industrial scale in France with over 370 products available across 345 Carrefour supermarkets nationwide
- Carrefour became the first retailer globally to launch Loop in-store, offering both private-label and branded products in reusable packaging
- The French system allows consumers to purchase products in reusable packaging, pay a deposit, and return items unwashed to any participating retailer
- Success factors include strong retailer partnerships, clear regulatory mandates, financial support, and a focus on convenience
- The French model contrasts with Loop's less successful pilots in the US, UK, Canada and Japan, providing a blueprint for large-scale reuse systems
After piloting in multiple markets, including the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and Japan, it is in France, with the leadership of Carrefour, that TerraCycle's reuse platform, Loop, has reached industrial scale, with more than 370 products available across 345 supermarkets nationwide.
Sydney, Australia; September 26, 2025: What was once an open question – can reuse work at scale for all consumer packaged goods – has been answered with a resounding "yes" in France. Carrefour, the leading grocer in France, became the first retailer in the world to launch Loop in-store, following an initial e-commerce pilot initiated in 2019. Since then, the retailer has expanded to 345 stores across France, introducing more than 50 of its own private-label products to the platform alongside over 370 products from national and global brands. Following Carrefour's success, other leading retailers, including Monoprix and Coopérative U, have joined the platform, helping to drive a national movement toward reuse.
Today, French citizens enjoy a fully functioning, nationwide reuse system offering a wide assortment of everyday consumer products from wine to shampoo to their favourite spread, in reusable packaging available at their local supermarkets. By pioneering this system, Loop and Carrefour not only validated French consumers' appetite for reuse but also created the operational conditions that made nationwide deployment possible, in Carrefour and other participating retailers. This interoperable system allows consumers to buy their favourite products nationally in reusable packaging, pay a deposit, use them as usual, and return them without cleaning to any participating retailer. This milestone marks a significant turning point in the global transition from a linear to a circular economy.
"France has shown that reuse can work, not as a concept or a pilot, but at full commercial scale," said Tom Szaky, Founder and CEO of TerraCycle and Loop. "What made this possible wasn't consumer demand alone but the alignment of regulation, funding, and supply chain convenience for all actors. It's a functioning national system. As other countries face growing pressure to move beyond single-use packaging, the lesson is clear, if the conditions are right, reuse can become a mainstream way of doing business and not a fringe solution."
Beyond integrating Loop in-store, the partnership mobilised an ecosystem of major brands, including Ferrero, Danone, Suntory, and Coca-Cola to join the movement. In doing so, Carrefour and Loop catalysed the creation of the world's largest reuse coalition, bringing together national brands, private labels, and other retailers.
Originally launched in 2019 by TerraCycle in partnership with the World Economic Forum, Loop was designed to accelerate the shift away from disposable, single-use packaging toward a durable, circular model. This led to the creation of the Loop Alliance – a global coalition of brands, retailers, governments, NGOs, and service providers committed to advancing reuse.
"Loop's progress in France shows what's possible when retailers, brands, policy makers, and solution providers move together," said Christian Kaufholz, Head, Community Engagement and Impact, Global Plastic Action Partnership, World Economic Forum. "At the World Economic Forum's 2019 Annual Meeting, we convened the Loop Alliance to catalyse this kind of cross-ecosystem collaboration from product design and safety to logistics, data, and common metrics. France's experience offers practical insights for scaling reuse models that are convenient for people and operationally viable for business."
While pilots were conducted in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Japan, and France, it was Carrefour – the first retail chain worldwide to commit to Loop – that transformed the concept from experimentation to national scale. Carrefour demonstrated that reuse could be seamlessly integrated into mainstream retail.
"Thanks to Loop, we've proven that it is possible to offer consumers everyday products in reusable packaging without compromising convenience or the in-store experience. This achievement at industrial scale confirms that the right mix of bold regulation, logistical innovation, and collective commitment is the key to transforming our distribution model for the long term," said Carine Kraus, Executive Director of Engagement and member of Carrefour's Executive Committee.
After years of testing, iterations, and lessons learned, France has now emerged as a model for how reuse can function at industrial scale – providing a global blueprint for countries seeking to implement reuse systems that work for all consumer packaged goods.
Loop's success in France stands in contrast to widespread deregulation and the rollback of voluntary corporate sustainability commitments in other markets. In France, the right mix of regulation, strong retailer leadership from commercial partners, financial incentives, and a focus on simplicity and convenience has proven that large-scale reuse is not only possible but also operationally sustainable.
"France has chosen to be a pioneer. With the AGEC law and the commitment of our businesses and regions, we have built one of the most advanced frameworks for reuse in the world. This isn't just a national success; it's a model that inspires, influences, and demonstrates that the transition to a circular economy is possible on a large scale," said Véronique Louwagie, Minister Delegate for Trade, Crafts, Small and Medium Enterprises, and the Social and Solidarity Economy of France. "France will continue to act and commit, alongside all who share this ambition: to build a more sustainable, fairer, and more resilient economy. Because protecting our planet is protecting our common future."
Why Reuse Works in France
Strong support and long-term partnership with leading retailers: Carrefour invested to make Loop a success, raised awareness among French consumers, provided visibility in stores, and made the offer appealing.
Clear regulatory mandates: France's Anti-Waste Law for a Circular Economy (Loi AGEC) requires retailers to incorporate reusable packaging by 2027, creating clear compliance targets.
Targeted financial support: French producer responsibility organisations allocate a portion of collected fees toward reuse infrastructure, including collection systems that help retailers and brands defray upfront costs.
Built for simplicity and convenience: Products come prefilled, require no special equipment or processes, and can be returned to any participating location.
Today, French consumers can access more than 370 food and household products in reusable packaging. Participating brands include Ferrero, Danone, McCormick, Cordier Group, William Peel, Suntory, Coca-Cola, and several leading private-label lines at major French supermarket chains such as Carrefour, Monoprix, and Coopérative U. This achievement was made possible by building the world's largest multi-stakeholder reuse coalition and collaborating with Circul'R, an international network advancing the circular economy.
The benefits of reuse are clear, from reducing waste and emissions, to supporting more resilient supply chains. But the path to scale has been anything but easy. Around the world, pilots have launched with optimism only to fade out, including Loop's own efforts in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., and Japan.
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