Business Day

British companies shun plastic cups

- Agency Staff London

British supermarke­t Waitrose, food giant Nestlé and accounting firm KPMG on Tuesday became the latest brands to announce plans to cut down on plastics, which are wreaking havoc on the environmen­t.

Waitrose, an upmarket grocer that treats loyal shoppers with free tea or coffee at its stores, said it will stop using disposable cups — which are very hard to recycle — in 2018.

Customers will continue to get their free coffee fix if they bring their own reusable cup, it said in a statement.

“We believe removing all takeaway disposable cups is the right thing to do for our business and are confident the majority of customers will support the environmen­tal benefits,” Tor Harris, the supermarke­t’s head of sustainabi­lity, said.

The shift by some of the biggest high-street names answers widespread consumer disquiet over pollution. Concerns were accelerate­d after popular British naturalist David Attenborou­gh urged consumers to stop using plastic bottles in his Blue Planet II series.

In January, privately owned company Iceland pledged to eliminate plastic packaging from its own-brand products by the end of 2023 — a first by a major British grocer.

KPMG said it would phase out the use of plastic water cups and cutlery at its 22 offices around Britain by the end of 2018, after a successful trial in Manchester where employees were given metal water bottles to use instead.

The global accounting firm said it uses about 3-million plastic cups every year, costing about £60,000.

“Even with supplying each of our 15,000 employees with a free metal water bottle, the scheme is projected to pay for itself within 18 months,” KPMG’s environmen­t manager, Sarah Lindsay, said in a statement.

PLASTIC WASTE IS ONE OF THE BIGGEST SUSTAINABI­LITY ISSUES THAT THE WORLD IS FACING TODAY

Separately Nestle — which owns more than 2,000 brands worldwide from chocolate snacks like KitKat and Smarties to Perrier bottled water — announced it aims to make all of its packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025.

“Plastic waste is one of the biggest sustainabi­lity issues the world is facing today,” Nestle CE Mark Schneider said.

Figures from the UN show that 8-million tonnes of plastic — bottles, packaging and other waste — enter the ocean each year, degrading precious habitats, killing marine life and entering the human food chain.

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.

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