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Packaging - less is more for environment

04 Mar 2010

Manufacturers and retailers have agreed to make significant cuts to food and packaging waste. The new measures could save customers and the industry £1 billion and cut carbon emissions by three million tonnes.

supermarket trolleyAnnounced today, the second phase of the Courtauld Commitment will see the industry endeavour to help householders waste less of the food they buy, reduce the environmental impact of packaging, and for the first time, address the waste from manufacture and supply.

These are coupled with ambitious new targets to recycle over 70% of packaging waste.

Courtauld II runs from April 2010 to December 2012, its main aims are to:

  • Reduce the carbon impact of grocery packaging by 1.1 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent emissions (10% reduction) through reducing the weight, increasing the recycling rates, and increasing the recycled content of grocery packaging.
  • Help consumers reduce the amount of food they waste by 330,000t (4% reduction) saving £800million and over 1 million tonnes of carbon emissions in the process.
  • Cut food and packaging waste throughout the supply chain, saving around 0.7million tonnes of CO2 equivalent (5% reduction).
  • Phase I of the Courtauld Commitment successfully ran from July 2005 to March 2010. Over that time its 42 signatories including all Britain’s major supermarkets, succeeded in completely halting packaging growth – the Government’s Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP) will announce results of efforts to reduce packaging and food waste later this year.

Liz Goodwin, WRAP CEO, said: “One of the biggest challenges society faces over the next decade is reducing the environmental impact of the things we buy.  This new agreement will bring about changes ranging from more efficient methods of production right through to the impact of household consumption."

Defra Secretary of State Hilary Benn, said: “A fifth of household waste is packaging, and more than half of this comes from the groceries we buy. This packaging can be essential but in many cases using less and smarter packaging can achieve the same result. Grocery manufacturers and retailers have already started to take action and have halted the increase in packaging. The new Commitment sees them go further than ever in reducing food waste and packaging, and making it smarter – and I want to see members of the industry continuing to sign-up over the coming months.”

Signatories to Courtauld II are AG Barr, Alliance Boots, Apetito, Arla Foods, Asda, Britvic, Constellation Europe, Cooperative Retail, Dairy Crest, Danone Dairies, Danone Water, Fosters EMEA, HJ Heinz, Innocent Soft Drinks, Mars (UK), Morrisons, Muller Dairies, Musgraves, Nestle, Northern Foods, Robert Wisemans, Sainsbury’s, Tesco, Unilever, Vimto, Waitrose, Warburtons and Weetabix.

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