By Maria Kalamatas | May 12, 2025
Copenhagen, DENMARK
In Danish warehouses and delivery vans, the traditional cardboard box is slowly disappearing. Not because of digital innovation, but because logistics companies are giving packaging a second, third—and sometimes fiftieth—life.
Since early 2025, Denmark has rolled out a new model of reusable logistics packaging, one designed to replace wasteful, single-use boxes with durable containers that move in closed loops across the country.
“We don’t want our packaging to end up in recycling bins—or worse,” says Mikkel Lauritzen, who runs operations at a regional transport company near Aarhus. “Our goal is to use the same container over and over, without compromise.”
The system is simple but carefully structured. Goods are packed in standardized boxes embedded with RFID tags. After delivery, customers can return the empty packaging via nearby shops, residential collection points, or scheduled pickups. From there, the containers are cleaned, re-scanned, and reintegrated into the logistics chain.
While reusable packaging isn’t a new idea, Denmark has taken it further by building interoperability across sectors. Grocery chains, clothing retailers, and electronics distributors all use the same container types, tracked by a shared national logistics platform that manages rotation, availability, and route optimization.
Initial results are promising. According to Lauritzen’s company, 84% of containers are returned within five days, and companies are reporting cost reductions over traditional packaging after just one fiscal quarter.
Customers have welcomed the shift. “I like not having to throw anything away,” says Helene Madsen, a Copenhagen resident. “There’s a return station at the café on my street. I drop it off with my coffee.”
The Danish Ministry of the Environment is watching closely. A proposal under review would provide tax incentives for certified circular logistics systems, particularly those demonstrating emissions reductions and material reuse at scale.
Beyond regulation, the real success lies in acceptance. What began as a pilot among sustainability-focused startups has now expanded to national retailers and mid-sized freight carriers. Even rural routes have begun adopting the model, thanks to digital tracking and coordinated returns.
For Lauritzen, the message is clear: “We used to throw things away because it was easy. Now, reusing them is easier.”
Denmark may not be alone in its vision—but it’s proving that logistics can lead environmental change not with slogans, but with systems.