Nearly half of all plastic waste generated in the UK each year is from packaging, top brands are not doing enough

Online shopping accounted for 20% of all retail sales in the UK in January last year, but as millions turned to it for everything from the most basic items to luxury purchases, the number has almost doubled in 2021 to 36%. This means that packaging waste has drastically increased, with nearly half of all plastic waste generated in the UK each year from packaging.

Collecting recent data and insights, Packaging Online, a Sustainable Packaging Supplier, have uncovered which top UK brands are the biggest plastic waste offenders in the country.

UK BRANDS WITH THE MOST UNRECYCLABLE PACKAGING

There is huge differentiation between percentage of unrecyclable packaging between brands from Waitrose with 30% to John Lewis with 0.3% of packaging being unrecyclable.

Consumer interest in sustainability and sustainable packing options has begun to put the pressure on retail brands, but they have still not developed fully recyclable packaging. Whilst cost and logistics are barriers to this, it mainly stems from lack of understanding and bureaucratic decision-making processes.

Brand

% Unrecyclable packaging

John Lewis

0.3%

Primark

0.4%

JD Sports

1.4%

Next

4%

T.K. Maxx

9%

Sainsbury’s

10%

Tesco

17%

Morrisons

17%

Marks & Spencer’s

25%

Waitrose

30%

As the table shows, food retailers seem to have much higher levels of unrecyclable packaging than fashion and household goods retailers. Nevertheless, even within sectors, there are high levels of differentiation, for example Sainsbury’s (9%) to Waitrose (30%) which shows shocking levels of disparity. The cumulative packaging waste between big brands is also demoralising with the 10 worst companies for packaging waste (including Coca-Cola, Pepsico and Nestle) contributing over 7.8 million metric tonnes of unrecyclable packaging waste per year.

AS A RESULT OF THE E-COMMERCE BOOM, AMAZON NOW PRODUCES ENOUGH ONLINE SHOPPING PACKAGING WASTE TO CIRCLE THE EARTH 667 TIMES

This statistic shows the effect that the massive growth in e-commerce has had. With only 80% of cardboard packaging being recycled, a staggering amount has gone into waste. Amazon is particularly poor due to their use of plastic film which is not accepted by most packaging recycling programs as well as incredible sales records meaning that Amazon is now producing nearly 30 million pounds (13,608 metric tonnes) of unrecycled plastic waste.

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