Singapore’s corporate gifting landscape is shifting. More organisations — from MNCs to government agencies to SMEs — are asking the same question before placing a bag order: what is the environmental story behind this product? Non woven bags have long been positioned as the eco-friendly alternative to single-use plastic, but the reality is more nuanced. This guide cuts through the greenwash to give you an accurate, actionable picture of non woven bag sustainability in Singapore: what PP non woven actually is, why RPET is different, what certifications mean, and how to build a credible green procurement case for your next campaign. To browse promotional non woven bags Singapore-wide at Aquaholic Gifts, start with their full non woven bag collection.
What Is Non Woven Fabric — and Is It Actually Eco-Friendly?
Standard non woven bags are made from PP (polypropylene) — a petroleum-derived thermoplastic. PP is spun and bonded into fabric without weaving, producing the lightweight, slightly textured material you’ll recognise from hospital gowns and grocery bags. It is technically recyclable as Resin Code 5 (PP), but Singapore’s kerbside recycling system does not accept non woven fabric — it must go to specific textile or industrial recyclers.
So is PP non woven eco-friendly? The answer depends on your benchmark. Versus a single-use plastic bag, absolutely yes — a 80 GSM PP non woven bag used 10+ times has a lower carbon footprint per carry than a single-use HDPE plastic bag. Versus a genuinely biodegradable material like jute, PP non woven loses on end-of-life. But it wins on cost, durability, and print quality, which is why it remains Singapore’s dominant promotional bag material.
The key sustainability lever for PP non woven bags: reuse frequency. A PP non woven bag used 20 times has a lower lifecycle carbon footprint per carry than almost any single-use alternative — including coated paper bags. The sustainability case rests on maximising reuse, which is why bag quality (GSM weight) matters environmentally, not just economically.
RPET Non Woven Bags — What They Are and Why They’re Different
RPET stands for Recycled Polyethylene Terephthalate — the same polymer used in PET plastic bottles. In RPET non woven production, used PET bottles are collected, cleaned, shredded into flakes, melted, and spun into fine fibres that are then bonded into non woven fabric using the same spunbond process as PP non woven. The resulting fabric looks and feels similar to standard PP non woven, but carries a meaningfully different environmental profile.
Key Differences: RPET vs PP Non Woven
| Factor | PP Non Woven (Standard) | RPET Non Woven |
|---|---|---|
| Raw material source | Virgin polypropylene (fossil fuel) | Recycled PET bottles |
| Carbon footprint (production) | Baseline | ~30–50% lower than virgin PP |
| Post-consumer recycled content | 0% | Typically 50–100% rPCR |
| Feel and appearance | Standard texture | Similar; slightly softer drape |
| Printability | Excellent (silkscreen, UV, HT) | Excellent (same methods) |
| Price premium over PP | Baseline | +10–20% at equivalent GSM |
| ESG / procurement reporting value | Basic (reusability argument) | High (recycled content certification) |
| End-of-life recyclability | Recyclable (PP5) in industrial stream | Recyclable (PET1) more widely accepted |
The Reusability Equation — How Many Uses Makes a Non Woven Bag Sustainable?
Life cycle assessment (LCA) data consistently shows that non woven bags need to be reused multiple times to “break even” against a single-use plastic bag on a carbon-per-carry basis. The specific number depends on the GSM, production method, and transport distance — but a practical benchmark for Singapore is:
60–80 GSM
Break-even vs plastic at ~7–11 uses. Entirely achievable for a good-quality bag used as a grocery or general-purpose carry bag.
90–100 GSM
Break-even at ~12–18 uses. Higher material input but substantially longer bag life — net positive over a 2–3 year period.
RPET
Carbon break-even achieved in fewer uses (~5–8) due to lower production emissions. The greener choice at scale.
This data supports a practical design principle for eco-focused campaigns: invest in higher GSM. A 90 GSM bag that gets used 30 times over two years is vastly more sustainable than a 60 GSM bag that tears after three uses and ends up in landfill. Understanding which non woven bag format maximises reuse potential is covered in our guide to which non woven bag type best suits your green campaign.
Green Procurement in Singapore — What Buyers and Procurement Teams Need to Know
Singapore’s Green Plan 2030
Singapore’s Green Plan 2030 commits the country to reducing waste sent to Semakau Landfill, increasing recycling rates, and embedding circular economy principles across industries. Government agencies and statutory boards are increasingly required to demonstrate sustainable procurement practices in annual reports — which creates a growing demand for eco-credentialed corporate gifts, including RPET non woven bags.
Certifications to Look For
- GRS (Global Recycled Standard) — Certifies that recycled content claims in RPET products are verified and traceable. The most recognised standard for RPET non woven bags in international procurement.
- OEKO-TEX Standard 100 — Certifies that the fabric contains no harmful substances at levels that could affect human health. Relevant for healthcare, childcare, and food-adjacent applications.
- ISO 14001 — Environmental management system certification at the factory level. Indicates the supplier operates environmentally responsible production practices.
- Singapore Green Label — Administered by the Singapore Environment Council. A local certification applicable to certain categories of reusable bags.
For most corporate gifting programmes in Singapore, GRS certification on the RPET fabric and ISO 14001 on the production facility together provide a robust sustainability claim suitable for ESG reporting. Always request certification documentation from your supplier and verify it is current.
How to Market the Eco Credentials of Your Non Woven Bag Campaign
Ordering an RPET non woven bag is only half the sustainability story — how you communicate those credentials to your recipients determines whether the investment pays off in brand perception. Here are practical tips for Singapore corporate campaigns:
Print the Sustainability Story on the Bag
Include a small icon or tag line on the bag itself — e.g., “Made from 100% recycled PET bottles” or “Each bag saves approximately 5 plastic bottles from landfill.” This transforms a standard giveaway item into a conversation piece that reinforces your brand’s environmental commitment every time the bag is carried.
Link the Bag to a Measurable Outcome
Quantify the impact: “Your order of 1,000 RPET bags diverted approximately 5,000 PET bottles from Singapore’s waste stream.” This type of specific, verifiable claim is far more compelling in ESG reports and stakeholder communications than generic “sustainable packaging” language.
Choose a Premium Laminated Finish for High-Value Recipients
An RPET laminated non woven bag combines environmental credentials with a premium product experience — the same full-colour offset printing and glossy or matte finish available on standard laminated bags, but with verified recycled content. For clients or recipients who expect a premium gift, this avoids the perception that “eco” means “cheap.” See the full range of laminated non woven bags for premium eco gifting for how this category works.
What Does a Sustainable Non Woven Bag Campaign Cost?
The RPET premium is real but manageable. At 1,000 pieces, RPET non woven totes (80 GSM equivalent, 1-colour silkscreen) typically cost 10–20% more than equivalent PP non woven bags. This translates to approximately SGD $0.15–$0.30 extra per bag — often less than the cost of a printed tag or thank-you card. For many organisations, this is a straightforward cost to absorb when it enables a credible ESG claim. For a full breakdown of bulk non woven bag costs and order minimums, including RPET pricing tiers, see our dedicated pricing guide.
Frequently Asked Questions — Eco-Friendly Non Woven Bags Singapore
Are non woven bags better than paper bags environmentally?
For reusable campaigns, yes. A quality PP non woven bag used 10+ times has a lower carbon-per-carry footprint than a virgin-pulp paper bag. Laminated paper bags (which are not recyclable due to mixed materials) compare even less favourably. Paper wins on end-of-life biodegradability in natural environments, but in Singapore’s waste management context, this advantage is largely moot.
Can I claim my RPET non woven bags are “carbon neutral”?
Not without additional carbon offsetting. RPET production still emits CO₂ — it is significantly lower than virgin PP, but not zero. “Carbon neutral” claims require purchasing certified offsets to balance remaining emissions, which is a separate step. Stick to verified, accurate language: “made from X% recycled content” or “lower-carbon than virgin PP non woven.”
Can RPET non woven bags be recycled in Singapore?
PET-based materials (Resin Code 1) have wider recycling acceptance than PP (Resin Code 5) globally, but Singapore’s domestic kerbside recycling still does not reliably accept non woven fabric in either polymer. Industrial textile recyclers and some retail take-back schemes (e.g., H&M, some supermarket chains) accept non woven bags. Communicate this to recipients when distributing eco-credentialed bags.
Does Aquaholic Gifts supply GRS-certified RPET non woven bags?
Yes, GRS-certified RPET non woven bags are available. Certification documentation can be provided upon request. Enquire when requesting your quote and specify your reporting requirements so the relevant documentation chain is prepared in advance.
Ready to Order Eco-Friendly Non Woven Bags for Your Campaign?
Aquaholic Gifts supplies both standard PP and RPET non woven bags with full custom printing from 300 pieces. Request a quote for custom non woven bag printing and let our team advise on the right material and certification level for your ESG requirements.







