The Columbus Dispatch

Dutch grocery adds plastic-free aisle

- By Christophe­r F. Schuetze

A supermarke­t in the Netherland­s wants to make it easier on the planet and easier for its customers to avoid adding to the mountains of plastic waste generated every day.

Last week, the supermarke­t, Ekoplaza, an upmarket chain, introduced what it billed as the world’s first plastic-free aisle in a store in Amsterdam.

There, shoppers found groceries, snacks and other sundries — but not an ounce of plastic. The items are packaged in compostabl­e materials or in glass, metal or cardboard.

Sian Sutherland, cofounder of A Plastic Planet, an advocacy group that has pushed the concept, said the initiative was “a landmark moment for the global fight against plastic pollution.”

The plastic-free aisle, in an Ekoplaza branch in western Amsterdam, contains about 700 items, including meats, sauces, cereals, yogurt and chocolate.

“It’s not just a marketing trick, it’s something we worked on for years,” Erik Does, the chief executive of Ekoplaza, said in an interview.

The opening of the supermarke­t aisle comes as the idea of banning plastic, or at least making more of it recyclable, gains supporters around the world.

In January, Prime Minister Theresa May of Britain called for plastic-free aisles in supermarke­ts in a speech outlining a 25-year environmen­tal plan.

The same month, the European Union rolled out a plan to make all plastic on the European market recyclable by 2030.

“If we don’t do anything about this, 50 years down the road, we will have more plastic than fish in the oceans,” Frans Timmermans, the vice president of the European Commission, told reporters in January.

Items in the European Union’s cross hairs: drinking straws, plastic bottles, coffee cups and lids — none of which were available to shoppers browsing the new aisle in Amsterdam on Wednesday.

Plastic packaging has become so widespread as a result of its convenienc­e and qualities of hygiene. But because of its light weight and ability to float, along with its increasing use in internatio­nal garbage exports, plastic has become an ecological bane.

“One man’s plastic food wrapper, is another man’s problem,” Sutherland said.

The proposals from the European Union and from Britain landed on the heels of a Chinese ban on all foreign plastic waste imports, which began in January.

Rwanda has also begun a campaign that threatened public shaming and even prison time to tackle the plastics problem, making it illegal to import, produce, use or sell plastic bags and plastic packaging except within specific industries like hospitals and pharmaceut­icals.

The nation is one of more than 40 around the world that have banned, restricted or taxed the use of plastic bags, including France and Italy.

In a study published last year, scientists estimated that 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic have been produced worldwide since the 1950s, when plastic began being mass produced. Of that, roughly 6.3 billion metric tons has been thrown away, 79 percent of it in landfills or in other parts of the environmen­t. Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to comScore. $4.5 million. million.

$65.7 million. $17 million. $13 million. $10.7 million. $10 million. $5.6 million.

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