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M&S to charge for
carriers
Marks & Spencer is to roll-out a 5p charge for food carrier bags in
all of its UK stores from the beginning of May to encourage customers to
reduce the number of bags they use and to raise money for environmental
projects.
All profits generated from the charge will go to environmental charity
Groundwork and be used to create or improve ‘greener living spaces’ such
as parks, play areas and gardens in neighbourhoods around the UK. It is
expected that around 40 neighbourhoods will benefit in the next twelve
months.
The unprecedented move follows a successful trial period of charging for
food carrier bags in over 50 M&S stores in Northern Ireland and the
South West of England. The trial has seen customers’ use of food carrier
bags drop by over 70% and raised over £80,000 for Groundwork. This money is
now being invested in six projects across those regions including the
development of the Daisy Hill Woodland in Newry, the creation of a play area
at the Old Warren Community Centre in Lisburn and improving a green space at
Woodhay Road in Plymouth.
Sir Stuart Rose, Chief Executive, Marks & Spencer said: "This
move lies at the heart of our 100-point eco plan, Plan A. We want to make it
easy for our customers to do their bit to help the environment and our
trials have shown us that they want to take action. Just imagine if M&S
customers right across the UK cut the number of food bags they use by 70%
– that’s over 280 million bags they’d be saving every year.
"On top of this, our customers will be raising valuable funds to go
to our partner charity, Groundwork, to invest in much-needed green spaces in
our neighbourhoods."
Tony Hawkhead, Chief Executive, Groundwork, said: "We are very
excited to be working with Marks & Spencer to support Plan A. We all
want our neighbourhoods to be cleaner and greener and our experience shows
that when a major household name takes the initiative, it can encourage
millions of people to change their behaviour. Not only will this scheme
reduce the amount of food carrier bags sent to landfill sites but it will
also help improve the quality of life in towns and cities across the
country."
M&S will launch the national carrier bag charging roll-out in two
phases:
- From Sunday 6 April until Monday 5 May, customers shopping in M&S
stores across England, Scotland and Wales will receive a free M&S
Bag for Life (usual cost 10p) with every food transaction (excluding
M&S stores in the South West of England and Northern Ireland where
charging is already in place and M&S outlet stores.)
- Then from Tuesday 6 May a 5p charge will be introduced for standard
food carrier bags (excluding mini food bags and horticultural bags which
will be available free of charge on request.) The Bag for Life will
revert to its usual 10p cost and will be replaced free of charge when
worn out.
- Also on 6 May M&S will introduce a brand new standard food carrier
bag made from 100% post consumer waste in all of its stores – the
first bag of its kind to be used by a major UK food retailer nationwide.
This move will reduce the amount of virgin plastic M&S uses by 3,400
tonnes per year and comes on top of a 3300 tonne annual saving that
M&S made by converting its Bag for Life, clothing and home carrier
bags to 100% recycled post consumer waste in April 2007.
The national roll-out of carrier bag charging is a major step towards
M&S’ Plan A commitments to aim to reduce carrier bag usage by a third
and send no waste to landfill from its operations by 2012. Plan A, M&S’
business-wide, £200 million ‘eco-plan’, was launched in January 2007.
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