The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Supermarke­ts failing on plastics and failing customers, claims Greenpeace

ENVIRONMEN­T: Study finds amount of single-use plastic used by UK’S big 10 has increased

- JOSIE CLARKE

Supermarke­ts’ use of single-use plastic has risen to more than 900,000 tonnes despite retailers making public commitment­s to cut down on their packaging, according to a report by Greenpeace and the Environmen­tal Investigat­ion Agency (EIA).

Seven out of the 10 major UK supermarke­ts increased their plastic footprint over the last year, with only Waitrose, Tesco and Sainsbury’s achieving “marginal” reductions.

The major supermarke­ts were ranked according to their commitment­s to reduce single-use plastic, eliminate non-recyclable packaging, engage with supply chains and transparen­t reporting, with Waitrose coming first, followed by Morrisons and Sainsbury’s. Lidl, Asda and Aldi were the three worst performers.

Iceland dropped from the top spot last year to seventh place this year, while Sainsbury’s climbed to third place from the bottom of last year’s table.

Waitrose and Morrisons scored highly after reducing or setting targets to reduce plastic packaging and trialling refill initiative­s.

Sainsbury’s announced plans to reduce plastic by 50% and introduced reusable produce bags for loose fruit and vegetables.

Leading brands that failed to respond to the survey for the second year running included Ocado, Best-one and Booker Group.

Overall, total plastic packaging used by the UK’S 10 biggest supermarke­ts increased from an estimated 886,000 tonnes in 2017 to 903,000 tonnes in 2018.

The rise was driven by sales of branded products, with plastic packaging associated with these items increasing by nearly 20,000 tonnes, the report said.

The EIA and Greenpeace are urging supermarke­ts to work towards eliminatin­g single-use plastic altogether by offering packaging-free products or switching to reusable and refillable alternativ­es, warning that “false solutions” such as swapping plastic for cardboard or making plastic thinner are “unacceptab­le”.

EIA ocean campaigner Juliet Phillips said: “It’s shocking to see that despite unpreceden­ted awareness of the pollution crisis, the amount of singleuse plastic used by the UK’S biggest supermarke­ts has actually increased in the past year.

“Our survey shows that grocery retailers need to tighten up targets to drive real reductions in single-use packaging and items. We need to address our throwaway culture at root through systems change, not materials change – substituti­ng one single-use material for another is not the solution.”

Fiona Nicholls, from Greenpeace UK, said: “Supermarke­ts are failing on plastics and failing their customers.

“We hear piecemeal supermarke­t announceme­nts on plastic every other week, but in reality they are putting more plastic on the shelves than ever.

“Supermarke­ts need to buck up and think bigger. They must change their stores to offer loose food dispensers, reusable packaging, and move away from throwaway packaging altogether.”

 ??  ?? The report said seven out of 10 of the UK’S major supermarke­ts increased their plastic footprint.
The report said seven out of 10 of the UK’S major supermarke­ts increased their plastic footprint.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom