Western Mail

Supermarke­t bosses in pledge to halve impact on environmen­t by 2030

-

THE bosses of five of the UK’s biggest supermarke­ts have promised to halve the environmen­tal impact of a weekly food shop by the end of this decade, as leaders meet in Glasgow at a key climate change summit.

Chief executives from Tesco, Sainsbury’s, Waitrose, Co-op and M&S said they would work with the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) to reduce natural destructio­n.

Under a pledge they will halve the amount of global warming that shopping baskets cause, the forests that are cut down to fill the baskets, the impact of the agricultur­e and seafood in baskets, and the food waste and packaging they produce.

Every year, the supermarke­ts, who together reach more than half of UK food shoppers, will submit data to WWF on each of these areas and publish their actions.

The shops also promised that before the end of next year they would set sciencebas­ed targets to help keep global warming below

1.5C above preindustr­ial temperatur­es.

The targets will cover all categories of emissions – known as scopes.

“As CEOs of leading UK food retailers, we recognise that a future without nature is a future without food. By 2030 we need to halt the loss of nature,” the supermarke­ts agreed in a joint statement.

WWF chief executive Tanya Steele said that it will not be possible to tackle climate change and keep global warming to below 1.5°C without dealing with global food supplies.

“Food production is one of the biggest threats to our planet and we will only tackle the climate and nature emergency if food retailers play their part,” she added.

“The promises these CEOs have made are game changing and we hope other food retailers will follow in their footsteps so that every shopper can be confident that the products they buy aren’t fuelling the climate crisis and pushing precious wildlife closer to the brink.”

The food sector is responsibl­e for more than 30% of total climate emissions, and 60% of the lost nature around the world, so reducing its impact can be a major step towards fighting climate change.

Every year it emits 17.3 billion metric tonnes of carbon dioxide, about 19 times more than commercial planes.

Separately, 20 new government­s have signed up to the Forest, Agricultur­e and Commodity Trade (FACT) dialogue forum which commits them to opening talks.

The members of FACT will discuss trade and market developmen­t, research and how to improve agricultur­e, as well as support for small farmers.

The membership includes Indonesia and Brazil, who have some of the world’s biggest forests.

It also includes major consuming countries, such as the UK, whose demand often causes the deforestat­ion elsewhere.

Together the group represents 75% of global trade in key commoditie­s that threaten forests, such as palm oil, cocoa and soya.

But signing up just commits them to a “desire to open dialogue” and actions are “non- exhaustive, non-binding and do not apply in all circumstan­ces to all countries.”

Tropical Forest Alliance executive director Justin Adams said that the dialogue group “has created new momentum”.

“Bringing these government­s together – from the global south and north – to tackle the issue of commodity production and deforestat­ion head on is a very significan­t developmen­t,” he said.

“Continued dialogue after Cop26 will be critical to progress.”

Matt Williams, an expert from the Energy and Climate Intelligen­ce Unit (ECIU), said: “Food and farming have largely been missing from this summit so far and are missing from many countries’ 2030 climate plans.

“This deal plants the seeds for food and farming to be considered serious parts of the route to net zero emissions.”

Another 27 countries have also signed up to a sustainabl­e agricultur­e pledge to help them meet climate goals, and will reroute some agricultur­al subsidies towards climate goals.

Also alongside the Glasgow Cop26 conference, the UK announced £500m in a programme that the UK Government said would help protect over five million hectares of rainforest­s from deforestat­ion, an area almost twoand-a-half times the size of Wales.

Anna Jones, at Greenpeace UK, said: “Efforts to address supply chains are limited to little more than a talking shop around terms of trade for agricultur­al commoditie­s.

“And there’s nothing on the need to reduce demand for products like meat and dairy that are driving deforestat­ion.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom