When packaging fails, the result is often mistaken for a product quality issue. In reality, exposure to challenging logistics environments can weaken materials, compromise seals, and increase the risk of damage long before products reach their destination.
As distribution networks become more complex, protective packaging must be designed for the realities of the entire supply chain, not just standard conditions.
This article explores how heat, humidity, and altitude affect packaging performance, and the strategies businesses can use to ensure products remain protected throughout their journey.
The reality of extreme logistics environments
Products moving through supply chains are rarely exposed to a single, controlled environment. Throughout transit, packaging may encounter multiple conditions that place stress on both the packaging itself and the products inside. Whether products are being distributed across the UK, shipped throughout Europe, or transported internationally, environmental conditions can have a significant impact on packaging performance.
Key environmental challenges include:
- Temperature fluctuations during transport, particularly within shipping containers, delivery vehicles, airport tarmacs, and distribution hubs, where temperatures can rise far above ambient levels.
- High humidity exposure in ports, warehouses, and storage facilities, increasing the risk of moisture-related packaging failures.
- Altitude and pressure changes during air freight and high-altitude transport routes, which can affect seals, cushioning materials, and package integrity.
- Combined environmental stresses, where heat, humidity, vibration, and pressure changes occur simultaneously rather than as isolated events.
As these conditions often occur within a single journey, protective packaging must be designed to withstand the effects of multiple environmental factors, not just individual risks in isolation.