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Interested in maladministration. Estd. 2005

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Human Rights in Ireland
Indymedia Ireland is a volunteer-run non-commercial open publishing website for local and international news, opinion & analysis, press releases and events. Its main objective is to enable the public to participate in reporting and analysis of the news and other important events and aspects of our daily lives and thereby give a voice to people.

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Lockdown Skeptics

The Daily Sceptic

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Voltaire Network
Voltaire, international edition

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Voltaire Network >>

Interesting - Packaging waste

category international | environment | press release author Tuesday October 23, 2007 10:44author by Dave Report this post to the editors

Under-packaging is an "order of magnitude worse" than over-packaging

Food waste levels are shocking but no-one is doing more to reduce them than the packaging industry, reports packaging industry body Incpen.

Supermarkets and their suppliers are reducing packaging but, more importantly they are making sure they use enough packaging to help stop food waste which is a much bigger problem.

More than six million tonnes of food goes to waste each year from households. Good packaging helps prevent this by keeping food fresh for longer and by helping us buy food in portion sizes that suit our needs. See notes to editors below.

The Local Government Association's recent survey found that 5% of the weight of the shopping basket is packaging. This shows that packaging saves far more waste than it generates. But weight isn't the only measure of environmental impact. Carbon footprint is also important. So too is using recycled content (which means the packaging needs to be heavier to do the same job).

Perhaps surprisingly, some packaging has to weigh more than its contents or it couldn't do its job. Champagne needs to be packed in a bottle that is 95 per cent of the total weight or it wouldn,t survive the journey from the vineyard to home, let alone contain bubbles. On the other hand, some packaging is much lighter - butter wrapping is only 1 per cent of the product.

Jane Bickerstaffe, Director of INCPEN points out, "If products are damaged or spoiled as a result of inadequate packaging, all the energy and materials in those products are lost. If we didn,t have packaging, landfills would be a great deal fuller, with damaged goods and spoilt food. Used household packaging occupies less than 3% of landfill space and companies are working to reduce it further."

"Its a shame that the LGA,s survey did not follow on and look at how much food arrived home in good condition and how much ended up as waste. After all the whole point of packaging is to make sure the food is safe and wholesome all the way through to when it,s consumed. It would also have been helpful if the survey had explained that far from being "rubbish? the packaging saved far more waste than it generated. It should also have explained that recycling has its own environmental impact because energy and materials are used to collect, sort and clean the items for recycling. There is always going to be some packaging and other waste that shouldn,t be recycled because it will have a negative environmental impact."

"The good news is - UK recycling rates are increasing all the time thanks to the efforts of councils and we use less packaging per person than many other European countries. That said, there are some examples of excessive use of packaging. A proven way to get rid of them is to establish a multi-stakeholder group to act as forum for consumers, complaints and provide companies with technical advice. Join INCPEN's campaign for a Packaging Watchdog."

author by checking your fingernails regularlypublication date Sat Oct 27, 2007 19:34author address author phone Report this post to the editors

I think this is very interesting, thank you for the article. It reminds me of when people tried to bring back their waste packaging to the point of sale (supermarket or manufacturers) arguing quite rightly that they just want to buy the product or food not all the crap. Although admittedly scared of making a fool myself I hazard to suppose people don't want widgets in their champagne six packs. I never touch the stuff. It is hard to accept a few dollops of mousturiser cream really need all the plastic & cardboard. You'd get three types of cardboard in those yokes ranging from the corrugated variety which though good for lighting fires would be very costly to stock up on at the same rate you stave off the wrinkles to other stuff laminated in colours you only should see on tv. Oh it makes me rant. We could of course cut out the packaging on those expensive runners the television presenters wear. Maybe the government could invite over a share of sweatshop small businesses and be a bit leniant on the appropriately trained guest workers green card requirements. That would be great & you'd see wonderful spin-off benefits, for no man nor woman should stray far from their cobbler. But when you think about it we can't all go to neighbourhood food depots with our own receptacles and bowls. We're all too dirty & though it me pains to write an obituary on what could have been a revolutionary global change in utilities, I think we must accept Tupperware has its limits as long as we're not in a natural disaster situation. The UN should send tupperware to victims of earthwquakes & start the ecology slowly in foreign places. These are the sort of ideas the Greens should be putting forward now they're in power, we need ideas. Why can't we show these third world countries how to make their own yoghurts & mousturisers? After all as long as they use different packaging the more time we have as a sustainable planetary system. At the end of the day it's all about ensuring poverty lasts. But we can package it better. You have your tupperware water proof plastic container & i've got my wrinkle cream.

 
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