The Scotsman

Lidl to remove cartoon characters from own-brand cereal packaging

- By JEMMA CREW newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The supermarke­t chain hopes its decision will encourage healthier choices and help parents tackle ‘pester power’ from their children while shopping

Supermarke­t giant Lidl has announced it will remove cartoon characters from all its own-brand cereal packaging in Britain by the spring.

The move will encourage healthier choices and help parents tackle “pester power” from their children while shopping, Lidl said.

In a survey of 1,000 parents of primary school-age children conducted by Opinium for the supermarke­t, three-quarters said they experience pressure from their children.

And half said they believe cartoon characters on cereal packaging encourages this, the research from February 2019 found.

Lidl said it will introduce cartoon-free packaging on its Crownfield cereals from the spring, to “allow existing stock to sell through and reduce waste”.

Georgina Hall, Lidl’s head of corporate social responsibi­lity, said: “We want to help parents across Britain make healthy and informed choices about the food they buy for their children.

“We know pester power can cause difficult battles on the shop floor and we’re hoping that removing cartoon characters from cereal packaging will alleviate some of the pressure parents are under.

“This latest move underpins our commitment to making good food accessible for everyone and helping customers lead healthier lives.”

Lidl, which has 790 stores in Britain, said it has cut more than 20 per cent in the volume of sugar across its own-brand cereal range since 2015.

At present, food firms are in a voluntary agreement with the Government over cutting sugar and fat in foods.

There is a mandatory “sugar tax” on soft drinks, which is proving much more effective than the voluntary agreement.

It has led to a 28.8 per cent reduction in sugar per 100ml of drink.

In October, the outgoing Chief Medical Officer for England used her final report to demand bolder action from ministers, including stricter regulation of food companies that seek to manipulate children.

Professor Dame Sally Davies called for the successful tax on sugary drinks to be extended to milk drinks that contain added sugar, such as milkshakes, and for ministers to consider plain packaging for unhealthy food.

Katharine Jenner, a nutritioni­st at the charity Action on Sugar, said: “If they can do it, why can’t everyone else? We hope the tide is turning and other retailers and food manufactur­ers follow suit for ownlabel and branded products.

“We’re in the midst of a child obesity crisis and it’s wrong to advertise sugary, fatty, salty foods to kids.”

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