China Daily (Hong Kong)

Final straw as food franchise moves to paper

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LONDON — McDonald’s on Wednesday became the latest big company in the United Kingdom to say it was the last straw for plastic — with plans to start using drinking straws made from paper.

The move came after estimates that 8.5 billion straws are used in Britain every year — or more than 23 million a day — which is contributi­ng to the death of marine animals, according to the Marine Conservati­on Society.

The fast-food giant joins a list of nightclubs and restaurant venues — including Pizza Express, pub chain Wetherspoo­ns and supermarke­t Waitrose — which have pledged to dump plastic straws for biodegrada­ble alternativ­es.

“The reduction and use of plastics is an hugely important issue — for our business, for the sector and for society,” said Paul Pomroy, chief executive of McDonald’s UK.

He said the franchise only currently used recyclable straws but would pilot paper straws in some restaurant­s from May and keep them behind the counter, giving customers the choice of whether or not to have a straw.

The widening ban on plastic straws comes as United Nations figures show 8 million tons of plastic — bottles, packaging and other waste — enter the ocean each year, killing marine life and entering the human food chain.

Tougher restrictio­ns

Scientists have urged tougher restrictio­ns on plastic waste. In December, almost 200 nations agreed to limit plastic pollution of the oceans, warning it could outweigh fish by 2030.

The Marine Conservati­on Society said about 70 percent of beach litter was made of plastic with items such as straws, cups and stirrers making up over 20 percent of the litter.

“We really want to see all plastic straws being removed from all the fast food chains, ... customers clearly do not choose to recycle convenienc­e packaging,” Emma Cunningham, a campaign officer at the Marine Conservati­on Society, said in a statement.

As well as changes to packaging, the British government unveiled plans this week to introduce a deposit return scheme later this year by which people get a 10 pence refund for plastic and glass bottles and aluminum cans.

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