In Morocco, a Quiet Revolution in Reusable Packaging Is Reshaping Exports

By Maria Kalamatas | August 7, 2025
Agadir —
On a citrus farm just outside Agadir, stacks of foldable crates are being loaded into a truck. They aren’t headed to the landfill. They’re going to Valencia — and they’ll be coming back.
Across Morocco’s agricultural export sector, a growing number of producers are turning to reusable packaging systems, a shift that’s cutting costs, reducing waste, and slowly changing how fresh produce reaches European markets.
“Before, everything left in cardboard or foam,” says Karim Belkadi, a cold chain coordinator for an export cooperative. “Now, 40% of our packaging comes home.”
A new rhythm in circular logistics
The crates — designed for over 40 use cycles — are part of a closed-loop system coordinated between Moroccan exporters and Spanish importers. After delivery, the units are collected, cleaned, and sent back on return trucks that would otherwise move empty.
The model isn’t flashy. But it works.
In some clusters, particularly in Souss-Massa, the reuse rate of packaging has doubled since last year.
“It’s not about being green for marketing,” explains Belkadi. “It’s just smart. We save money, and our customers like the consistency.”
Logistics firms catching up
At the port of Tanger Med, a local freight handler has installed a basic cleaning unit to rinse and prep returnable boxes on-site. It’s not automated. There’s no AI. Just water, staff, and routine.
But for the supply chain, it makes all the difference. Exporters no longer need to wait weeks for crates to come back.
One operator managing return logistics between Spain and Morocco put it bluntly:
“Sometimes innovation is just doing old things better.”
Beyond produce
The model is spreading. Two seafood cooperatives near Dakhla are now testing similar crate systems for fresh fish exports to France. And in Casablanca, a pilot for reusable garment boxes is underway with a textile manufacturer shipping to Portugal.
There are challenges, of course. Loss, theft, and washing logistics all come into play. But the benefits — fewer single-use materials, less customs waste, and lower repacking costs — are pushing the trend forward.
The post In Morocco, a Quiet Revolution in Reusable Packaging Is Reshaping Exports appeared first on The Logistic News.
Share this post
Related
Posts
IATA Says Air Cargo Could Finally Turn a Corner in 2026
After several stop-and-go years, air cargo may have some breathing room ahead. The industry isn’t celebrating just yet, but the...
Wind propulsion: bound4blue raises $44M to accelerate the decarbonization of ships
The Spanish start-up bound4blue, specializing in rigid suction sail systems for ships, has just completed a fundraising round of approximately...
War Risk Premiums Surge as Tensions in the Black Sea Spill into Shipping Costs
There has been a noticeable shift in the Black Sea — not only on the water, but in the numbers...
JAL Expands Cargo Partnership with Kalitta as Trans-Pacific Demand Holds Firm
Japan Airlines is pushing deeper into the cargo market—but without adding a freighter fleet of its own. The carrier has...