Business Day

Woolies bolsters fight on plastic

- Nick Hedley Senior Business Writer hedleyn@businessli­ve.co.za

Woolworths plans to phase out nonrecycla­ble plastic packaging for its own products, as well as plastic bags, straws and earbuds.

Woolworths plans to phase out nonrecycla­ble plastic packaging for its own products — as well as plastic shopping bags, straws and earbuds — by 2022.

This is in response to mounting pressure on retailers globally to reduce the environmen­tal damage caused by plastic.

The retailer said in a statement it “aims to have none of its packaging end up in landfills, which requires 100% recyclable material and a supportive recycling infrastruc­ture”.

Woolworths group head of sustainabi­lity Feroz Koor told Business Day that the shift towards recyclable materials “will have significan­t resource and supplier implicatio­ns as it is a complex challenge”.

“We will have to continue working closely with recyclers, packaging convertors, producer responsibi­lity organisati­ons and government to develop technicall­y and commercial­ly viable solutions to recycling different plastics and investigat­ing alternativ­e materials,” Koor said.

Woolworths said its “vision of zero packaging waste to landfill” would involve the removal of “unnecessar­y” single-use plastics and a total shift to reusable or recyclable own-brand packaging by 2022.

It said it had already stopped selling plastic straws in its stores, while paper-stemmed earbuds would replace plastic versions by November. In its cafés, the retailer was replacing plastic straws and cutlery with paper and wooden alternativ­es, while it was also piloting a coffee cup recycling programme.

It was also installing vending machines for recyclable goods in certain stores and was testing “affordable” reusable shopping bags “with a view to phasing out single-use plastic shopping bags completely”.

Woolworths SA CEO Zyda Rylands said the company’s research and customer engagement­s indicated that many customers wanted to see the shift from nonrecycla­ble materials happen “as fast as possible”.

Pick n Pay chairman Gareth Ackerman said in April the retailer had “made good progress” in shifting customers away from single-use plastic bags, having sold more than 1-million reusable bags in 2017.

Reversing “the tide of plastic damage” was a complex issue given the industry’s reliance on plastic to protect products, to aid food safety, for convenienc­e and to make products affordable.

“We will come forward with a comprehens­ive plan this year covering such areas as packaging, plastic bags, plastic straws and ways for customers to be more sustainabl­e while depending less on plastic,” Ackerman said.

In the UK, Tesco has already announced plans to ban all nonrecycla­ble plastic by 2019.

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