New Delhi, February 2026.
Amazon India today announced a collaboration with the Indian Institute
of Technology (IIT) Roorkee to develop innovative packaging materials from
agricultural waste.This
project aims to create non-wood paper technology that divertsagricultural waste
from burning while reducing pressure on virgin wood pulp.These lightweightyet strong packaging
materials offer recyclable and home-compostable alternatives to traditional wood
pulp paper or plastic bags.
The research will focus on converting crop residues such as wheat
straw and bagasse into high-quality pulp for paper mailers with performance
comparable to conventional paper packaging. This helpsreduce stubble burningin India
by turning agricultural waste into valuable packaging material. It also reduces
dependency on imported virgin wood pulp and could createadditional income for
farmers by providing a market for agricultural residues.
The collaboration with IIT Roorkee’s Department of Paper and Packaging
Technology will begin with lab-scale development and testing over a 15-month
period. Subject to successful performance tests,Amazon will provide support to
progress to industrial trials, process validation, and commercial productionby
mid to late next year.
Abhinav Singh, Vice President of Operations at Amazon India said“At Amazon, we are building and
managing India’s fastest, safest, and most reliable operations network, and
we’re committed to making it more sustainable. As part of this effort, we’re
partnering with IIT Roorkee to develop innovative packaging from crop residue.
India generates nearly 500 million tons of this waste annually, and by
repurposing it into packaging, we can support a more circular economy while
reducing reliance on conventional materials."
Prof. Kamal Kishore Pant, Director IIT Roorkeesaid, "Sustainability is no longer a
choice, it is an urgent national priority. This collaboration between IIT
Roorkee and Amazon is a step towards realizing India’s vision of a circular
economy, aligned with government missions such as Swachh Bharat, Startup India,
and the National Resource Efficiency Policy. By transforming agricultural
residues into biodegradable packaging materials, we are addressing the twin
challenges of stubble burning and a reliance on virgin materials in India,
while creating scalable solutions that can benefit industries, farmers, and
society at large. This initiative showcases how academic research and industry
partnerships can accelerate India’s journey towards a more sustainable, and
self-reliant future.”
Prof. Vibhore
Kumar Rastogi and Dr. Anurag Kulshreshtha from the INNOPAP Lab (Innovations in Paper and Packaging) at the Department of Paper and
Packaging Technology at IIT Roorkee, Saharanpur Campus will be leading this
research project.
As part of its
ongoing efforts to reduce packaging, Amazon shipsmore than 50% of all customer
orders in India either in their original packaging or with reduced packaging. The
company ships customer orders in product packaging to more than 300 cities
across the country. Since 2019, Amazon India has eliminated 100% of single-use
plastic from its packaging across fulfillmentcenters.
Amazon India is
committed to powering our operations more sustainably. The Climate Pledge is Amazon’s goal to reach net-zero carbon across our
operations by 2040. We’ve worked fast and made impactful
progress over a short period of time, including through investments
in carbon-free energy, packaging innovations, electrification of our transport
network, circularity improvements, and AI. Amazon has set a goal to return more water to communities in India
than it uses in its direct operations by 2027.