Daily Mail

Sainsbury’s pledges to halve plastic packaging

- By Sean Poulter Consumer Affairs Editor

SAINSBURY’S has pledged to halve plastic packaging by 2025 by introducin­g refillable cartons and bottles for everything from milk to breakfast cereals, pasta and laundry liquid.

Britain’s second biggest supermarke­t is considerin­g returnable and refillable milk bottles, or selling milk in pouches to be put in a long-life jug kept in the fridge.

Waitrose, Morrisons, Marks & Spencer and others are trialling ‘bring your own’ packaging, where shoppers buy food and other products by weight.

Sainsbury’s is also running a trial to allow people to remove excess packaging at stores and doing away with plastic wrapping from fruit and vegetables.

Chief executive Mike Coupe said: ‘Reducing plastic and packaging is not easy. Packaging plays a vital role in keeping our food safe and fresh and minimising food waste. We must therefore find alternativ­es to plastic that protect the quality of our food while minimising our impact on the environmen­t.’

The retailer will remove plastic packaging from many products or use alternativ­es, such as paper and cardboard.

Loose produce bags will be gone from all stores by October and plastic trays are being removed from asparagus, sweetcorn, tomatoes, carrots and herb pots.

Trays made from PVC and polystyren­e, which are difficult to recycle, will be replaced with recyclable alternativ­es.

Plastic film on fruit and veg will be replaced by the end of 2020 and water stands will be available to refill bottles in 326 of the supermarke­t’s cafe’s.

Customers are being encouraged to bring their own containers to meat and deli counters and there will be more recycling facilities in its car parks.

Boris Johnson yesterday hinted at a law to ban polluting plastic packaging waste being sent overseas.

Every year the UK sends more than half a million tons to countries such as Malaysia and Turkey which environmen­tal groups fear is burned, buried or dumped.

No 10’s plans could appear in the Queen’s speech next month.

LOVE and marriage used to go together like the proverbial horse and carriage – but no longer, official figures show.

Married women are now a minority in the adult female population as cohabitati­on increasing­ly replaces the traditiona­l wedded state. And couples who do marry do it later as lifestyles change – particular­ly among career women.

A sign of the times, perhaps. But still a cause of regret, surely.

Proclaimin­g one’s commitment to another in a place of worship or register office may not be for everyone. But it is still the best guarantee of a stable and loving family – the break-up rate for cohabitees being three times that of those who walk the aisle.

A pity, then, that Government does not do more to protect this ancient institutio­n with bigger tax breaks for married couples. TWO cheers for Sainsbury’s in promising to halve plastic packaging – but only by 2025. The supermarke­t chain will introduce refillable containers and allow customers to remove excess packaging in stores – while warning that they will have to change their ways. We have news for our food retailers: shoppers are not the problem. Who has not felt a pang of guilt and disgust at the heap of plastic left over after an off-the-shelf meal at home? Most of us would be only too happy to put up with minor inconvenie­nces to save our oceans from desecratio­n.

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