Daily Mail

Co-op to ban throwaway plastic bags in 1,400 stores

- By Colin Fernandez Environmen­t Correspond­ent

The Co- op has said it will scrap single-use carrier bags in hundreds of stores by 2020, in another boost for The Daily Mail’s war on plastic.

They will be replaced by biodegrada­ble bags that can be composted in food waste caddies.

Around 1,400 of Co-op’s 2,500 food stores in england, Scotland and Wales will be making the major change in areas with food waste collection­s. It said that the step was part of plans to stop using singleuse plastic products in its own brands and lower the amount of plastic packaging it uses by 2023. Among other measures, the supermarke­t is to stop using hard-torecycle materials like black plastic food trays which are rejected by many recycling centres.

It is a boost for The Daily Mail, which has campaigned against plastic pollution for the past decade.

The move comes as a BBC survey revealed that households across the country face 39 different sets of rules over what plastics they can recycle. The patchwork of rules is leading to confusion and waste, said the Corporatio­n.

Co-op is the first supermarke­t to replace single-use plastic bags with compostabl­e bags. however Tesco has said it will scrap 5p single-use plastic bags and only sell more durable 10p bags for life, and Asda has made a similar promise.

Meanwhile Lidl has promised to stop using black plastic packaging for its fruit and veg range by the end of the month. And it plans to remove non-recyclable packaging entirely by August 2019. The Co-op has also promised to use a minimum of 50 per cent recycled plastic in bottles, pots, trays and punnets by 2021.

The compostabl­e bags will cost 5p and replace standard single-use carrier bags of the same size and strength. It will mean 339 tonnes of plastic bags will be taken out of circulatio­n, the store said. All ownbrand black and dark plastic packaging will be eliminated by 2023.

Jo Whitfield, Co- op’s retail chief executive, said compostabl­e carriers were a ‘simple but ingenious way to provide an environmen­tally-friendly alternativ­e to plastic...’

Aldi announced in August it would be replacing black plastic trays with clear recyclable alternativ­es.

And Iceland said by 2023 it would no longer pack bananas in plastic.

Morrisons offers paper bags for customers for fresh produce while Waitrose is to use clear plastic lids on drinks bottles and has begun selling wine in a can. The UK Plastics Pact has been signed by giants including Aldi, Asda, Lidl, Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose. They vow to make 100 per cent of their plastic packaging reusable, recyclable or compostabl­e by 2025.

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Three up: Frank Lampard and wife Christine with their newborn
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