New figures show carrier bag use down. Wed, 25th August 2010 New figures show carrier bag use down.![]() Supermarkets and their customers have reduced the number of 'single-use' carrier bags being handed out for the fourth year in a row. Since independent monitoring began in 2006, the number handed out in the UK each year has been cut by 4.6 billion. Over the same period the total weight of material used has more than halved.With sales volumes having risen by more than six per cent over the same period, this achievement is a ringing endorsement of the voluntary approach which Without any need for legislation, annual totals for use of 'single-use' bags have fallen every year since 2006. In the year to May 2010 43 per cent fewer bags were handed out than in 2006. When bags of all types are counted the reduction over that time is 41 per cent – showing this is a genuine gain not simply a case of thin plastic bags being replaced by other types. These achievements build on a voluntarily pledge to halve the number of 'single-use' bags between May 2006 and May 2009, which was all-but met last year.Using this snapshot analysis of a single month (May) each year, 45 per cent fewer 'single-use' bags were issued in May 2010 compared with May 2006. This was achieved despite sales growth and customers focusing on the economy, rather than the environment. "The reduction in bag use is great news, but it's the halving of the total weight of single-use carrier bags which shows retailers really scoring on the crucial issue of reducing environmental impact. Add a comment
category Retail | source The Retail Bulletin |
