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(Photo credit: Lidl)

Initiative

Lidl launches supermarket-first packaging using ocean bound plastic

London, United Kingdom

  • Lidl will next month launch a supermarket-first food packaging using ocean bound plastic collected from South East Asia
  • The initiative will prevent over 60 tonnes of plastic from entering the ocean per year – the equivalent of 2.5 million plastic water bottles
  • New packaging will be rolled out across 13 fresh fish products including white fish and salmon
  • This commitment forms part of the discounter’s initiatives to ensure 50% of packaging is made from recycled materials by 2025 and builds on the retailers leading position on sustainable fish sourcing

Between 80 and 90% of the plastic packaging that reaches the ocean enters from coastlines in developing regions such as South East Asia. The initiative will initially prevent more than 60 tonnes of plastic from being introduced to the ocean per year, which is the equivalent of 2.5 million plastic water bottles. 

Lidl will initially roll out the packaging from 30th March across fresh fish products in partnership with supplier Copernus, representing more than 50% of the discounter’s fish lines and including white fish and salmon. The discounter plans to roll out the packaging across its entire fresh fish range in 2020 and is exploring other uses for the packaging across other product lines.

Lidl has also improved the recyclability of the packaging, which will divert over 200 tonnes from landfill with a new recyclable tray. This packaging will now be labelled with ‘Widely Recyclable’, in line with On Pack Recycling Label (OPRL) guidelines, meaning the majority of customers can recycle at kerbside.

This new packaging forms part of the discounter’s initiatives to ensure 50% of packaging is made from recycled materials by 2025, reduce plastic by 20% by 2022, and make 100% of own brand packaging widely recyclable, reusable or refillable by 2025. 

Lidl GB’s Head of Corporate Social Responsibility, Georgina Hall, commented: “By 2050, there will be more plastic in the ocean than fish, according to data from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation. The majority of ocean plastic enters the sea from ten main entry points, eight of which are in Asia. Countries like those in South East Asia lack the waste management infrastructure to manage this problem, which is often overwhelmed by population growth or tourism.

“We are proud to be the first UK supermarket introducing packaging incorporating plastic that would have otherwise ended up in the ocean, helping to tackle the problem directly as part of our commitment to prevent plastics ending up as waste. We are actively looking to extend this innovative solution to other product lines to help reduce the amount of plastic ending up in our oceans and keep our environments healthy.”

This commitment provides customers with the assurance that the fish products they buy from Lidl are sourced from the most sustainable fisheries and farms and packaged in materials from sustainable sources, in order to drive a circular economy.

The packaging, developed with our partners Copernus, Sharpak and Bantam Materials, is made from 80% recycled content and a minimum of 30% of the weight of the tray is made up of ocean-bound plastic. 
Alongside Copernus, Lidl has also launched this new initiative in conjunction with Bantam Materials, the supplier of ocean-bound plastic via their Prevented Ocean Plastic (POP) program, and Sharpak part of Groupe Guillin, a packaging manufacturer which manufactures Lidl’s new fish trays.

The initiative builds on Lidl’s commitment to Project STOP (Stop Ocean Plastic), which aims to design, implement and scale circular economy solutions to marine plastic pollution in South East Asia. Lidl was the first retail and technical partner to join the initiative in 2019. 

In 2019, Lidl was awarded with the MSC Mid-Sized Retailer of the Year award for its commitment to sustainable seafood sourcing, for the fourth year in a row.

www.lidl.co.uk

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