Western Daily Press

1,200 jobs at risk as Asda plans overhaul of its in-store bakeries

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SUPERMARKE­T chain Asda has started consulting with more than 1,000 staff over its plans to overhaul its in-store bakeries.

The company said that it was treating redundancy as “the last option” during the consultati­ons, which it said was sparked by changing tastes among shoppers.

As many as 1,200 staff work at the instore bakeries across 341 Asda branches.

“If the proposals are enacted, the priority will be to move as many colleagues as possible into alternativ­e roles within Asda, with redundancy the last option,” the company said in a statement on Wednesday.

Customers are increasing­ly looking for speciality breads, wraps, bagels and pancakes ahead of traditiona­l loaves.

The shift will see a centralise­d bakery delivering a larger range of pre-baked goods to supermarke­ts each day, replacing the current model where the goods are baked from scratch on site.

Asda chief merchandis­ing officer Derek Lawlor said: “The current instore bakery model has restricted our ability to respond to changing customer demands and offer them the speciality products and freshly baked goods they want to buy throughout the day.

“The changes we are proposing will deliver a much better and more consistent bakery offering for customers across all our stores. We know these proposed changes will be unsettling for colleagues and our priority is to support them during this process.”

The move was criticised by the GMB union who said it was bad for consumers and employees alike.

Roger Jenkins, GMB national officer, said: “Asda’s plans to scrap baking their products from scratch on site and replace them with part-baked products from mass producers is not good for the consumer.

“Over 1,000 skilled bakers are now at risk of losing their jobs. GMB calls on Asda to retain these valuable skilled employees and continue to offer the customer truly fresh produce baked by profession­al bakers.”

Asda’s move follows a similar decision by Tesco, taken just over a year ago, which put up to 1,800 jobs at risk.

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