Derby Telegraph

Laser trial will replace need for stickers

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A UK supermarke­t will use lasers to draw barcodes onto some of its avocados instead of using stickers, in a trial designed to help the environmen­t.

High-powered lasers will remove a tiny section of the top layer of the skin of extra large avocados sold at Tesco.

Westfalia Fruit, which supplies avocados to Tesco, said avocados were perfect for the laser trial due to the thickness of the bright green fruit’s outer skin.

They will etch size informatio­n onto the avocados as directed by a computer programme, with the process taking a third of a second.

Once the avocados have been zapped, they are essentiall­y left with a tattoo on their skin which shows informatio­n for customers and cashiers, including the size or variety of the fruit.

Westfalia Fruit said it had conducted extensive trials to ensure the quality, shelf life and taste of the popular salad item is not affected by the laser etchings.

Tesco sells nearly 70 million avocados a year and has seen demand for the fruit grow by 15% in the last year.

It said it is starting with laser etchings on the extra large avocados as they give the most visual impact.

The chain is also trialling replacing the plastic tray packaging for two of its most popular avocado lines and moving to a cardboard container that is easier to recycle.

The trials will take place in about 270 Tesco stores in south-east England and – if feedback from customers is positive – will be rolled out across the Tesco estate.

Tesco is working on the trial with Westfalia Fruit, which is the UK’s main avocado supplier and is based in Spalding, Lincolnshi­re.

It said that if the changes are rolled out across all Tesco stores, it could save more than 20 million pieces of plastic tray packaging from the twin pack avocado alone, increasing up to 25 million pieces across the pre-packed range.

Tesco said it could also save nearly a million plastic stickers on its loose extra large avocados, based on current sales informatio­n provided by the supplier.

Tesco avocado buyer Lisa Gilbey said: “We’re always looking for innovative ways to reduce the environmen­tal impact of our products, and cut down on plastic waste in the home through changes to our packaging.”

ALL political parties are being urged to back a recycling scheme for drink containers in their manifestos. coalition of environmen­tal groups is calling for a UK-wide deposit return scheme as parties prepare to unveil their proposed policies ahead of the July 4 General Election.

The scheme, which would see consumers recoup a small deposit when they return single-use bottles and cans, has been in developmen­t by the Environmen­t Department (Defra) since 2017 and was part of the 2019 Tory manifesto.

But its planned launch date was put back from 2024 to 2027 after heavy criticism from some in the drinks industry and discrepanc­ies between devolved administra­tions over the inclusion of glass.

Surfers Against Sewage, Reloop, the Marine Conservati­on Society and Keep Britain Tidy said the policy is “overwhelmi­ngly popular” with the British public.

The groups cited a poll published on Thursday which suggested that nearly seven in 10 adults support the introducti­on of a deposit return scheme to cut drinks litter and boost recycling.

The survey of 1,000 people, conducted by Portland Communicat­ions on behalf of Reloop from January 19-24, also found that 77% of Conservati­ve voters, 69% of Labour voters and 71% of Liberal Democrat voters back the policy.

Jenni Hume, UK and Ireland director at Reloop, said: “We’ve heard positive things from all major parties about the deposit return scheme over recent months, now it’s time to commit these warm words to the pages of their manifestos.

A bottle deposit scheme is an overwhelmi­ngly popular reform which would incentivis­e everyone to do their part to drive up recycling rates and quality for drinks bottles and cans, with internatio­nal examples showing remarkable reductions of litter in parks, rivers and beaches.”

Louise Reddy, policy officer at Surfers Against Sewage, said: “The public are sick of plastic pollution, and we’re challengin­g politician­s to take immediate action.

“People and the planet desperatel­y need to see commitment­s to end the scourge of pollution flowing into the ocean. Those in power need to act now.”

The campaigner­s highlighte­d the success of similar deposit return schemes in countries like Germany, Norway, Finland and Latvia, which have seen an increase in plastic bottle recycling rates and reductions in litter.

Meanwhile, Keep Britain Tidy’s recent national litter survey found drink containers made up 75% of UK street litter by volume and the Marine Conservati­on Society found them on 93% of beaches surveyed.

Catherine Gemmell, policy and advocacy manager at the Marine Conservati­on Society, said: “The problem is only getting worse, with an increase in bottles and cans on those beaches rising 14% compared to the previous year.

“The good news is we know that deposit return schemes work and will turn the tide on this problem, reducing the amount of litter entering our ocean and preventing it from damaging our marine wildlife. Our seas can’t wait any longer for them to start.”

Allison Ogden-Newton, chief executive of Keep Britain Tidy, said: “The next government needs to be aware – the environmen­t needs this, and the public demands it.”

People and the planet desperatel­y need to see commitment­s to end the scourge of pollution flowing into the ocean

 ?? ?? According to campaigner­s nearly seven in 10 people would support the introducti­on of a refund scheme for the return of used plastic bottles
According to campaigner­s nearly seven in 10 people would support the introducti­on of a refund scheme for the return of used plastic bottles
 ?? ?? Stopping plastic entering the oceans must be a key commitment from any future government
Stopping plastic entering the oceans must be a key commitment from any future government
 ?? ??

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