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£15bn a year cost of supermarket packaging

no body in particular | 09.03.2004 10:11 | Ecology | London | World

Supermarket shoppers are spending £470 a year - a sixth of their food budget - on packaging, a report suggests.

The Liberal Democrats spoke to the UK's nine biggest supermarket chains about packaging, waste, and energy use.

They found customers spent £15bn on packaging each year and that delivery lorries travel the equivalent of two return trips to the moon every day.


Their How Green Is Your Supermarket? report calls for a cut in lorry trips and the use of biodegradable bags.

Environment spokesman Norman Baker said only three of the nine chains asked used railways and not enough local produce was sold.

"With one supermarket for every 10,000 people, the big chains have a duty to provide environmentally friendly alternatives, support local producers and the British organic industry and commit to saving energy.

"On sourcing, energy use and packaging, some supermarket chains are taking the lead, but that best practice needs to be shared.

His report makes 26 recommendations, including calling for:

Plastic bag recycling points at all supermarkets
"Bags for Life" on display at checkouts
Targets for increasing the percentage of packaging made from recycled material
Supermarkets to set targets for reducing lorry mileage.
Mr Baker also urged the government to encourage supermarkets to establish national standards and reach national targets on the use of local produce and making more use of rail services.



no body in particular

Comments

Hide the following 2 comments

what you can do

10.03.2004 01:44

The easiest thing you can do is to stop using the plastic bags. It is so easy just to take along a backpack and/or some calico bags...so easy.

For the more committed, study up on permaculture and start growing some of your own food. Get involved in community gardens.

bleg


Packaging in US

10.05.2004 23:02

In the United States, the worst evil appears to be the styrofoam and plastic overwrapping on meat products. The unsold meat is sold to Renderers that melt the meat down with the wrappings usually left on by the supermarkets and the renderers claim they are unable to remove it, and have had a law passed in '96 that calls the packaging "an unavoidable deleterious substance" [21 CFR 109, 409 & 509]. The toxic-wrapping-polluted, melted-down meat is then sold to the meat, fish and poultry industries as animal feedstuffs. I have found internet estimates that state that 100% of Americans suffer styrene levels just below the critical level. The US government has a law that allows this melt down, but its food and environment regulatory agencies do not entertain this melt down as a possibility with respect to air releases during melt down, nor to entry into our foodchain via polluted feedstuffs.

Chris
mail e-mail: cjaynesy@yahoo.com