Finding stillness in motion: Introducing Vibrantz’s 2026 Color of the Year, Infinity Blue - Vibrantz Technologies

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Paints and coatings

As sustainability expectations accelerate across the coatings industry, Vibrantz Technologies continues to lead with data-backed innovation. From cradle to gate, our Pearls solid colorant tinting system demonstrates measurable reductions in CO₂ emissions, waste and resource use—positioning it as one of the most sustainable tinting solutions available today.

Our latest lifecycle analysis (LCA) confirms that the Pearls solid colorant tinting solution delivers, on average, a 15% lower carbon footprint per square meter of coated surface compared to traditional liquid tinting systems.

This milestone demonstrates how design rooted in environmental responsibility—paired with tangible performance advantages—can help coatings manufacturers and retailers advance their own sustainability goals.

A clean, emission-free approach to color

From the start, Pearls was engineered to revolutionize tinting by eliminating unnecessary ingredients and reducing environmental impact at every stage.

Pearls doesn’t contain any harmful ingredients such as humectants, biocides, preservatives or disruptive additives. This enables paint manufacturers to meet the growing demand for environmentally friendly, emission-free paints without compromising color performance.

The solid colorant system maintains full color integrity during both production and tinting, aligning with increasing eco-conscious consumer preferences for safer, low-VOC coatings.

Circular design from concept to commercialization

Sustainability principles guided the Pearls concept from its earliest development through large-scale manufacturing.

At every stage of production, we have worked to use our resources as effectively as possible. Materials that fall out of specification are recycled back into production or repurposed elsewhere, while packaging is made entirely from recycled materials or designed for full recyclability.

Efficient packaging and storage further minimize transport emissions, reinforcing our commitment to lifecycle optimization.

LCA confirms real-world environmental gains

The LCA results quantify what makes Pearls a breakthrough in sustainable tinting. By eliminating certain chemical compounds and minimizing waste, Pearls reduces global warming potential (GWP) and overall energy use throughout the value chain.

While ingredient selection is the largest contributor to Pearls’ lower GWP, additional benefits such as less waste in containers and reduced maintenance requirements for dispensers also improve the environmental profile.

Together, these efficiencies contribute to a 15% reduction in carbon footprint per square meter of coated surface versus a conventional tinting solution—an important benchmark for manufacturers seeking to meet or exceed sustainability targets.

Why it matters

Compared to conventional liquid colorants, Pearls’ overall environmental impact is significantly lower throughout its lifecycle. Reduced waste generation, alonger shelf life, fewer raw materials in the formulation and higher pigment load all contribute to its reduced CO₂ emissions and GWP. These attributes make Pearls not only a cleaner choice—but a smarter, longer-lasting one.

Supporting people and purpose

Beyond environmental metrics, Pearls delivers operational and social benefits. The clean, service-friendly concept reduces mess, minimizes heavy lifting, and simplifies tinting processes for store associates and production staff. It is about protecting people as much as the planet.

Simplified labeling, fewer ingredients and less waste also support safer workplaces and more transparent products.

Driving continuous improvement

Vibrantz continues to scale the Pearls technology globally, investing in energy-efficient production, sustainable raw materials and renewable energy use across its facilities. Continuous investments in process efficiency and energy reduction at Vibrantz’s growing production site in Sittard, Netherlands further lower Pearls’ lifecycle emissions, demonstrating how scaling up can actually mean scaling down environmental impact. These efforts align with the company’s broader CSR roadmap to lower emissions, enhance product circularity and empower customers to reach their sustainability goals. With a verified 15% lower carbon footprint and a cleaner, simpler tinting process, Pearls demonstrates how sustainability and performance can truly go hand in hand—empowering paint manufacturers to achieve measurable climate goals without compromising color quality or customer experience. Learn more here.

Paints and coatings, Plastics

Plastic recycling has a dark side

Every year, more than 15 million metric tons of plastic enter the world’s oceans – a key indicator of the global waste crisis. Despite advances in recycling systems, one category of packaging is still a stubborn blind spot: black and dark-colored plastics. Traditionally colored with carbon black pigments, these materials absorb rather than reflect near-infrared (NIR) light.

This matters because modern recycling facilities depend on NIR detection systems to find, sort and route plastics into the correct waste streams. When dark packaging passes undetected, it is mislabeled as “unsortable” and often sent straight to landfills or incineration. This invisible barrier has made black packaging synonymous with lack of recyclability, which undermines circular economy goals.

At the same time, dark packaging is beloved by consumers and brands. The color black denotes elegance, intelligence and authority, while other deep tones signal confidence and sophistication. Color psychology can influence 85% of customers’ purchase decisions, making it a non-negotiable element of brand identity. The result: companies have faced a frustrating tradeoff in sustainability-versus-design.

Applications across industries

Black and dark plastics are everywhere, from food trays and beverage bottles to personal care packaging and durable consumer goods. In the U.S. alone, they represent 15% of plastic waste, overall. Meanwhile, proposed legislation, such as the Accelerating a Circular Economy for Plastics and Recycling Innovation Act of 2024, is pushing for 30% recyclable content in packaging by 2030.

These pressures ripple across the value chain. Brand owners face costs to redesign or substitute materials. Waste management companies struggle with inefficiencies in sorting. Increasingly eco-conscious consumers grow skeptical of sustainability claims when “recyclable” dark packaging ends up polluting the environment.

The question is clear: how can the industry reconcile consumer desire for sleek, dark packaging with the planet’s urgent need for sustainable solutions?

See in the dark with NIR technology

The solution lies in rethinking pigments, not abandoning color. NIR-reflective pigments make black and dark plastics visible to NIR detectors, allowing sorting machines to identify them accurately and recycle them alongside lighter-colored plastics.

Unlike carbon black, which absorbs NIR light, Vibrantz’s pigments reflect it, effectively unlocking the unique “fingerprint” of each polymer. In practical terms, this means that a black polypropylene shampoo bottle or a dark PET tray can now be recognized as recyclable material in sorting facilities. Trials at facilities like TOMRA and PICVISA have shown that plastics colored with Vibrantz pigments are detected easily and reliably.

The beauty of this solution is that it preserves the consumer-facing benefits of dark packaging, such as brand identity, shelf appeal and emotional resonance, without sacrificing recyclability. The switch to NIR pigments is cost-effective compared to redesigning packaging or changing materials entirely, and the end consumer perceives no difference in look or feel.

Vibrantz’s role: Pioneering sustainable pigment solutions

Vibrantz has taken a leadership position in this space, pioneering two first-to-market NIR pigment technologies:

  • Food-grade solutions, designed for applications like sushi trays, which meet strict migration standards (FDA-approved and compliant with EU 10/2011).
  • Commodity-grade solutions, ideal for broader consumer packaging and durable goods.

By combining expertise in material science, advanced formulation technology, and responsible sourcing, Vibrantz ensures that its pigments satisfy both expectations for performance and standards for regulation and sustainability.

Collaborations have been central to progress. Through partnerships with plastic collectors and sorters in Spain and technology providers such as PICVISA, Vibrantz has shown how pigment innovation can improve recyclability at scale.

The big picture: Circularity, policy and opportunity

As policymakers and organizations push toward a global plastics treaty that prioritizes circularity, solutions like NIR pigments will be powerful enablers. They bridge the gap between ambitious goals and practical implementation and can help industries adapt without compromising the consumer experience.

Manufacturers that adopt NIR pigments can address mounting pressures from regulations, consumer expectations and brand commitments. For waste management companies, NIR pigments can reduce inefficiencies and contamination. For society at large, NIR pigments can be an incremental but impactful step toward reducing the plastic in our landfills and oceans.

A future where color meets circularity

Sustainability goals sometimes drive difficult tradeoffs, but black and dark plastics need not be among them. By making the invisible visible, Vibrantz’s NIR pigments help industries embrace the dark, confident that color, consumer appeal and recyclability can coexist.

As sustainability imperatives continue to reshape global manufacturing, Vibrantz’s NIR pigments illustrate how a targeted innovation can unlock large-scale progress. By applying science-backed solutions, the Vibrantz team continues to create a future where packaging is both beautiful and sustainable.

See it live at K 2025

Curious to experience NIR pigments in action? Visit Vibrantz at the K 2025 in Düsseldorf, Germany this October. Stop by Hall 8A Booth K31 as we’ll be showcasing how our NIR pigment technology makes dark plastics truly recyclable, with the PICVISA sorting machine demonstrating real-time detection and separation of items. It’s a firsthand look at how science-backed innovation is driving a more sustainable, circular plastics economy.

Building & Construction, Paints and coatings

Coordonnées
Caitlin Ramsey