Morrisons to introduce plastic-free fruit and veg areas to help customers buy bagless
127 loose fruit and veg varieties will be offered over the year
New bagless fruit and veg shelves will save 3 tonnes of plastic every week
Morrisons initiatives announced to date will remove 9,000 tonnes of unnecessary or problematic plastic a year
Morrisons is to become the first British supermarket to roll-out plastic free fruit and veg areas in many of its stores. Customers will be able to choose from up to 127 varieties of fruit and veg - and buy them loose or put them in recyclable paper bags.
The move follows a ten-month trial in three Morrisons stores in Skipton, Guiseley and St Ives where the amount of loose fruit and veg bought by customers increased by an average of 40%. The new 'buy bagless' fruit and veg shelves are expected to result in a similar switch from bagged to loose - saving an estimated three tonnes of plastic a week, equating to 156 tonnes a year[i].
Customers will see an entire section of the fruit and veg department with no plastic. There will be a neighbouring section where customers can still buy packaged veg, if they choose. When customers buy loose fruit and veg, they can either take them through the checkout loose or bag them in Morrisons recyclable paper bags.
This is the latest announcement from Morrisons – which made changes that will remove 9,000 tonnes of unnecessary or problematic plastic each year. This figure includes174m plastic produce bags removed from fruit and veg aisles, and 600 tonnes of unrecyclable polystyrene removed from branded food and drink products. A further 1,300 tonnes of plastic will be removed as a result of the launch of paper carrier bags this month.
The loose fruit and veg areas will be rolled out in 60 Morrisons stores during the course of 2019. They will then continue to be introduced as part of the supermarket’s ongoing store refurbishment programme nationwide – saving even more plastic over time.
The loose veg range includes everyday essentials such as carrots, potatoes and onions as well as more unusual seasonal varieties such as celeriac. Fruit will include apples, pears and oranges, plus figs, persmimons and pomegranates. The expansion of the range means that for the first time, customers will also be able to buy loose cauliflower, white cabbage and chestnut mushrooms.
Drew Kirk, Fruit and Veg Director at Morrisons said: “Many of our customers would like the option of buying their fruit and veg loose. So we’re creating an area of our greengrocery with no plastic where they can pick as much or as little as they like. We’re going back to using traditional greengrocery and we hope customers appreciate the choice.”
Morrisons plastic reduction initiatives are detailed in its 2018-19 Corporate Responsibility Review. The review also details that the group has reduced carbon emissions by 45% since 2005. Morrisons is taking a step in the right direction to help combat plastic pollution by becoming the first British supermarket to roll out plastic-free fruit and veg areas in its stores.
Shoppers will be able to pick up 127 varieties of fruit and veg - all plastic-free - with the option to either buy them loose or use recyclable paper bags.
The company estimates it will save three tonnes of plastic a week, or 156 tonnes each year.
It comes after a successful 10-month trial in stores in the UK towns of Skipton, Guiseley and St Ives, where customers bought 40 percent more loose fruit and veg, seemingly happy enough to ditch the unnecessary plastic packaging.
The new 'buy bagless' shelves will be part of a completely plastic-free area within the fruit and veg department and will include all the usual suspects such as apples, carrots, oranges, onions, potatoes, tomatoes and cauliflower. There will also be 'unusual seasonal varieties' such as celeriac and persimmons.
Drew Kirk, fruit and veg director at Morrisons, said: "Many of our customers would like the option of buying their fruit and veg loose. So we're creating an area of our greengrocery with no plastic where they can pick as much or as little as they like. We're going back to using traditional greengrocery and we hope customers appreciate the choice."
Sixty stores will get the plastic-free areas this year, with more introduced later as part of Morrisons' ongoing store refurbishment programming, meaning that a whole load more plastic will be saved.
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