Syngenta Flowers trades plastic for paper with Tapp data loggers

Tapp data loggers contain no lithium-ion batteries and are made from fibers extracted from post-harvest agricultural waste, which are subsequently turned into paper housing.

A white rectangular piece of paper sitting on top of clear plastic bags of green plants in brown cardboard boxes. The piece of paper reads Syngenta This label is a data logger, temperature, tap phone here.
A Tapp data logger being used in a box of chrysanthemum unrooted cuttings at Syngenta Flowers' Alva, Florida, site.
Photo courtesy of Syngenta Flowers

Syngenta Flowers announced its partnership with Tapp to replace current single-use plastic data loggers with Tapp paper data loggers.

The partnership represents a significant step toward greater sustainability and efficiency in data logging, offering growers a simple, accessible solution, the company said.

By switching from traditional plastic loggers to Tapp devices, Syngenta can reduce plastic waste and sharply cut electronic waste — from batteries and printed-circuit boards to LEDs, chips and other electronic components — bringing the company in line with broader sustainability goals.

"We prioritize quality and customer service. Our new data loggers give customers instant access to shipping information via their smartphones while allowing us to monitor cool-chain performance," said Mark Schermer, global head of flowers at Syngenta Flowers. "This innovative approach not only promotes product quality but also offers deeper insights into shipping conditions across our routes, fully in line with our commitment to sustainability."

Tapp data loggers contain no lithium-ion batteries and are made from fibers extracted from post-harvest agricultural waste, which are subsequently turned into paper housing.

After a single tap with a mobile device, it transfers temperature and humidity data to a secure cloud platform visible to both shipper and receiver.

The paper logger can be placed in the regular paper-recycling stream, dramatically reducing end-of-life handling time and overall electronic waste.

"As a market leader, Syngenta Flowers is setting a precedent the entire industry will notice. We are incredibly proud of this collaboration," said Niels Postma, founder of Tapp. "We are convinced it will be a success and congratulate Syngenta on taking a major step in minimizing electronic waste."

The first shipments with the Tapp loggers begin in week 20 from Syngenta Flowers’ farms, with full transition to paper loggers by autumn.