Waitrose launches packaging-free trial
Oxford store offers refillable options for
items such as alcohol, rice and
cleaning materials
Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs
correspondent Tue 4 Jun 2019 00.01 BST
Waitrose has unveiled its vision of
environmentally conscious shopping, offering customers the chance to buy food
and drink that is completely free of packaging as part of a ground-breaking trial for a large
retailer.
In a new drive
to try to eliminate unnecessary plastic and packaging, shoppers will be able to
fill their own containers with a range of products from a series of dispensers,
using the first dedicated refill station installed by a major UK supermarket.
In a trial
starting this week at a Waitrose supermarket in Oxford, customers are being given refillable options for
products including wine and beer, rice and cleaning materials, with prices
typically 15% cheaper than the packaged alternatives.
A standalone pick and mix
range of frozen fruit and a borrow-a-box scheme to help carry shopping home are
other new retail formats being tested by Waitrose at the Botley Road shop.
Waitrose has
transformed the store by removing hundreds of products from their packaging,
although shoppers will still be able to buy the packaged versions if they wish.
Plastic waste
has become a major environmental issue, with television programmes such as Blue
Planet exposing its detrimental effects on the oceans, and media coverage highlighting
the dangers of a global plastic binge.
Waitrose is
among the UK’s supermarkets which have signed up to the UK Plastics Pact – an
industry-wide initiative to
transform packaging and reduce avoidable plastic waste. However, retailers have
been criticised for not doing more to tackle the issue at an earlier
stage.
“This test has
potential to shape how people might shop with us in the future so it will be
fascinating to see which concepts our customers have an appetite for,” said Waitrose’s Tor Harris.
Ariana Densham,
an oceans campaigner for Greenpeace UK, said: “This is a genuinely bold step from Waitrose to trial food dispensers so
customers can use refillable tubs and jars. Lots of supermarkets are starting
to sell loose fruit
and vegetables, but this kind of innovation could spark a refill culture that’s so desperately needed to cut plastics
in mainstream shops.
“The top 10 UK
supermarkets produce 810,000 tonnes of throwaway
packaging each year, so we need to see other major retailers taking plastic
reduction seriously and following Waitrose’s lead.”
A choice of 160
loose fruit and vegetables will be available, along with four different wines
and four beers on tap to be taken home in reusable
bottles and nearly 30 products including pasta, rice, grains, couscous,
lentils, cereals, dried fruit and seeds available from dispensers.
The “unpackaged”
model relying on refills has already been adopted by some independent
retailers, delicatessens and farm shops but this is the first time it is being used
at a national supermarket chain.
For the
borrow-a-box scheme, customers will pay a £5 deposit which is refundable when
the container is returned. A frozen pick and mix section initially selling
fruit such as blueberries and mango will encourage shoppers to bring in their
own containers.
“Courtesy of Guardian News & Media
Ltd”.
VOCABULARY
A standalone pick:
(?) ‘Una selecció autònoma, separada, exclusiva...’
Binge: An occasion when an activity is done in
an extreme way, especially eating, drinking, or spending money. Binge eating
disorder.
Tackle: If you tackle a difficult problem or
task, you deal with it in a very determined or efficient way.
Loose
fruit: Fruit separated pieces.
Beers
on tap: If drinks are on tap, they come from a tap
rather than from a bottle. In Spanish we say “de barril”, not “de grifo”.
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