Consumers prepare for Plastic Free Trust Mark

A Plastic Free Trust Mark has been launched in a move that is hoped will revolutionise how shoppers buy their food and drink.

Environmental campaign group A Plastic Planet developed the Trust Mark which will be awarded to food and drink products that are packaged without plastic.

Designed to sit clearly on the front of the pack, the Trust Mark is intended to instantly inform and empower consumers to make plastic-free choices.

Everyday items that consumers have recently learned contain plastic include: tinned beans, teabags, and glass bottle caps.

Campaigners say the move will lead to a radical reduction in the amount of single-use plastic packaging food and drinks.

Early adoptees of A Plastic Planet’s Trust Mark include UK supermarket Iceland, Dutch retailer Ekoplaza and tea brand teapigs.

Iceland will begin to adopt the Trust Mark on relevant own-label products this month, and roll it out progressively across its range as it delivers its commitment to eliminate single-use plastic packaging of all Iceland own-label products by 2023.

The first products to feature the Trust Mark include Iceland’s own-brand eggs, cottage pie and vegetable burgers, delivering a reduction in plastic usage of over 600 tonnes per year. Other Iceland own-label foods expected to switch to non-plastic packaging during summer 2018 will include soft fruit, mushrooms and potatoes.

Dutch supermarket chain Ekoplaza is rolling out the Trust Mark across 74 outlets across the Netherlands with the aim to have each store representing the mark as well as featuring it on selected products of the Ekoplaza own brand by the end of the year.

In February this year, A Plastic Planet unveiled the world’s first plastic-free aisle at an Ekoplaza store in Amsterdam. All products within the plastic-free aisle will now be carried in each of its 74 stores.

The Trust Mark will also be appearing on branded products such as the plastic-free teapigs packaging in stores across the UK.

Trust Mark-accredited packaging will include materials such as carton board, wood pulp, glass, metal and certified-compostable biomaterials.

Sian Sutherland, co-founder, A Plastic Planet, says, “Now we all know the damage our addiction to plastic has caused, we want to do the right thing and buy plastic-free.  But it is harder than you think and a clear no-nonsense label is much needed.

“Our Trust Mark cuts through the confusion of symbols and labels and tells you just one thing – this packaging is plastic-free and therefore guilt-free. Finally shoppers can be part of the solution not the problem.”

Richard Walker, managing director of Iceland, adds, “With the grocery retail sector accounting for more than 40% of plastic packaging in the UK, it’s high time that Britain’s supermarkets came together to take a lead on this issue. I’m proud to lead a supermarket that is working with A Plastic Planet to realise a plastic-free future for food and drink retail.”

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