The other day, a few friends shared with me (Oberon) a UK viral
video about plastic, and it got me thinking. In the video, a group of
supermarket shoppers collectively do their grocery shopping, but when they get
to checkout they all remove the plastic packaging from the bought items and
leave it on the counter as a sort of plastic protest. The video describes how
the group wants supermarkets to take more responsibility for the overuse of
plastic packaging in the products they sell. I find it interesting to think
about the issue of ‘who takes responsibility’ when it comes to packaging waste.
So, who is responsible for single-use waste plastic packaging? I thought I’d ‘unpack’
(pun intended) the issue a little.
There are four main players (probably more) to
consider – governments, producers, retailers, and individual shoppers. You could
also add other players – media, insurance companies, packaging designers (note
the saying ‘Waste is a design choice’), oil companies, plastics manufacturers, waste
and recycling managers, industry regulators, and more – but I’ll set these
others aside for now.
Let’s look at each of the first four players I mentioned:
Let’s look at each of the first four players I mentioned:
GOVERNMENTS
Each level of government (local, state, federal, plus
international obligations) has different responsibilities and capacity to
influence single-use plastic packaging. The Australian Government regulates and
manages waste at a national level and administers the Australian Packaging
Covenant, which is a sort of ‘soft’ regulation, requiring big businesses to
report on the steps they are taking to reduce and better manage packaging.
State Governments have responsibilities around
pollution and managing all sorts of aspects of community health and well-being
(and waste), but regulation around plastic packaging is not generally offered,
unless there is lots of pressure from elsewhere (e.g. peer pressure from other
states, or strong lobbying from individuals/communities/local govts). State
governments do have the potential to enact fantastic positive change around
single-use plastic packaging, but they have to have the will.
Local government is where (I believe) the greatest in-roads
can be made in terms of regulating use or sale of certain types of plastics,
but the sphere of influence is limited, to the municipality, and also to limited
certain business contexts – e.g. Hobart City Council are banning single-use
plastic packaging for takeaway food, but are unlikely to be able to ban all the
single-use plastic packaging that lines every aisle of a supermarket.
PRODUCERS
PRODUCERS
Producers (the people who grow the food and make the
supermarket products) vary greatly – some give attention to environmental
impacts, whilst others completely avoid them. Some will give the impression of
addressing environmental concerns, such as by calling something ‘eco’ or ‘natural’,
whilst continuing to sell harmful products. Producers often sit between a rock
and a hard place – they are bound by governmental regulation (e.g. food
packaging laws) as well as retailer contracts that may demand certain products
be packaged in plastic (e.g. spinach leaves or strawberries), in order for the
product to work within the long supply chain of a supermarket. Many foods in
Australian supermarkets have had to travel long distances, and with that comes
additional requirements for certain types of packaging to keep food fresh and
undamaged. Whilst producers can look for ways to avoid plastic packaging of
their products, the alternatives may be cost-prohibitive or a legal nightmare –
just look at the struggle Elgaar Dairy (both a producer and a market retailer) have
had to go through to provide milk in returnable glass bottles.
RETAILERS
Retailers also vary enormously, from the massive
multinational corporations, down to little Jimmy selling lemonade on the nature
strip. But all retailers choose which products they want to sell, and this
includes choosing which items they will sell that are wrapped in single-use
plastic. Plastic is cheap, and so many retailers are reluctant to avoid its prevalent
use. Big retailers will run the argument that customers demand certain items be
wrapped in plastic, or they will say that they are simply offering customers the
variety of options that they desire. They have control over packaging of
home-brand lines, but rarely do anything to reduce the plastic in them.
Big supermarkets now have automatic electronic checkouts,
(which, as an aside, cuts jobs), and (say they) require additional plastic
packaging to appropriately use the automated checkout system. This is partly
why you’ll often see the organic produce in supermarkets is plastic-wrapped. Big
supermarket chains will continue to sell what the customer buys, and are
strongly driven by their profit margin, with only tokenistic attention given to
things like waste and environmental impacts. They will continue to respond to
the dollar signs, and rarely to complaints to their social media walls. A
couple of years ago, I initiated and worked on a #PlasticFreeProduce campaign
to encourage supermarkets to reduce the plastic packaging of their fruit and
veggies – but it was like water on rock, as the supermarkets have strong
bureaucratic defences, sending out a lowly customer support person to respond
to our concerns, offering the same stock standard (weak) responses, and demonstrating
very little to no positive change at their end.
Fortunately, there are some retailers who prioritise packaging and waste – these businesses deserve higher support and their business models encouraged. They are not the focus of the viral video I mentioned above, but they are relevant to the solutions to the problem.
INDIVIDUAL SHOPPERS
Fortunately, there are some retailers who prioritise packaging and waste – these businesses deserve higher support and their business models encouraged. They are not the focus of the viral video I mentioned above, but they are relevant to the solutions to the problem.
INDIVIDUAL SHOPPERS
Individuals have more power than they know. Whilst we each
appear to be a mere drop in the ocean of customers that frequent big retail
stores, our influence (including our absence from those stores) is apparent.
When you abstain from buying a certain plastic-wrapped product from a major chain
supermarket, and choose instead to grow your own or support a small, ethical
and local producer, then you are sending multiple positive messages. You will
both reduce the sales of harmful items from supermarkets (which can lead them
to discontinue items or consider alternatives) and also promote local
businesses to flourish, or (if you grow your own) demonstrate self-reliance –
which is a fantastic way to reduce waste.
But what about the fact that it is still just a drop
in the ocean? Well, my family have limited out waste over the last two and a
half years to little more than would fill a medium-sized glass jar. We’ve also
stopped shopping at supermarkets and now source food from local, ethical
businesses, grow our own, and barter. The (roughly) $250 per week that we used
to spend at the supermarket each week is now supporting a healthy local
economy. That equates to around $30,000 that we have taken from the sales of
major supermarkets, and divested into businesses that prioritise or support
zero-waste approaches. Doing this helps to those smaller ethically-driven
businesses to offer items at more competitive prices. Also, supporting local is
also great, because it is generally easier to open up a dialogue about waste
and improved waste-management, because you can speak directly to the person who
can influence production and sales.
That is not to mention the 5 tonnes or so of landfill that we have avoided (compared to the average household over 2.5 years), and the numerous tonnes that would have previously gone to recycling (which we now avoid, compost or burn for heat). And then there is the influence of this ‘passive’ activism – others have been prompted to make changes in their habits, upon seeing that living with much less waste can be possible, cheaper and more convenient that the supermarket trawl. There are now around 7000 people in Zero Waste Tasmania, and other zero waste groups that have started in response to this group. Many others are enacting positive change in their area and discussing ways to reduce waste. Maybe it’s not a drop after all – maybe it’s the start of a wave.
That is not to mention the 5 tonnes or so of landfill that we have avoided (compared to the average household over 2.5 years), and the numerous tonnes that would have previously gone to recycling (which we now avoid, compost or burn for heat). And then there is the influence of this ‘passive’ activism – others have been prompted to make changes in their habits, upon seeing that living with much less waste can be possible, cheaper and more convenient that the supermarket trawl. There are now around 7000 people in Zero Waste Tasmania, and other zero waste groups that have started in response to this group. Many others are enacting positive change in their area and discussing ways to reduce waste. Maybe it’s not a drop after all – maybe it’s the start of a wave.
It should be mentioned that neither individuals,
producers, retailers or governments, hold all responsibility for waste. But
each group have things that they have high influence over, that they could be
doing more about, especially when they are informed about the harmful impacts
of existing practices. I will also add that none of these four players act
completely independently – there is an interplay within and between all four –
and I believe that effective, positive outcomes are more likely if the dialogue
remains open, informed and courteous. But remember, governments don’t have to
keep single-use packaging legal, producers don’t have to keep wrapping
everything in plastic, retailers don’t have to keep buying plastic-wrapped
goods, and individuals don’t have to buy plastic-wrapped stuff. The
responsibility is indeed shared amongst all these groups.
So, back to the viral video mentioned at the beginning of this rant. Those shoppers who bought plastic-wrapped items, only to remove the packaging at checkout? They want to absolve themselves of responsibility for the packaging and put the onus back onto the retailer. My problem is that those customers are still choosing to buy the plastic-wrapped products in the first place. The retailer’s bottom line is unaffected. The cost to remove the discarded plastic packaging is minimal (whether they landfill it or recycle it). Mountains more plastic is used in the bundling up of goods on pallets at the back of the store, and during other steps in production and transport. The plastic around the product is merely the tip of the waste iceberg for most items in a supermarket. And the customers have the option to simply not buy those plastic-wrapped items. Most fruits and vegetables can be bought unwrapped at supermarkets, and basic needs met by buying items elsewhere, from local grocers, shops, bulk food stores, markets, community gardens, co-ops, butchers, delis, etc.
The viral video does not offer solutions, nor does it demonstrate willingness by those customers to actually change their own behaviours. But many people CAN change how they shop, get their food, and meet their own needs. The viral video shows does have the effect of showing off just how much plastic is wrapped around items that supermarkets sell. But just filming items on the shelves will do that, right? – you don’t need to buy and remove the packaging to see what it is made from.
We can’t keep hand-balling responsibility around.
Seeing supermarkets argue that they are merely responding to customer demand
(by offering plastic options), whilst ignoring those who argue to remove
plastic, is simply exhausting. Conversely, demanding change from supermarkets
when there are perfectly valid and do-able ways to live without them (e.g. see
our book ‘Bountiful: A family guide to waste-free living’ to be released later
this year! *nudge, nudge, wink, wink*) by following any number of ‘zero-waste
approaches’. The short- and long-term solution is for individuals and local
communities (including businesses and governments) to adopt new, and
environmentally-much-less-harmful paradigms – ones that do not rely on
multi-national corporations who demonstrate little care for environmental
impacts. If they did care, the supermarkets would have stopped selling
single-use plastic products decades ago.
Good in-roads to broad, positive change (e.g.
community level and bigger) can be made in various ways. But first, we should
take a little time for self-reflection – what can we do as individuals and
households to reduce our own waste? Once we are informed about the waste we
produce, and take steps to reduce it, then the barriers to further
waste-reduction becomes more apparent. You may find that you can live without
supermarkets, but that you hit waste barriers when you start focusing on the
waste associated with clothing, electrical goods, or travel. For each wasteful
item, there can be a number of ways to address it. If you have the time, learn
about their production system, business ethics, supply chain, and their organizational
context. It may be worth writing to them to highlight a concern, but if you do
this, offer solutions as well. Refer them to other businesses who are leading
the way on a particular issue, so that they may aspire to improve practices.
Also, write letters and emails to your local
government aldermen or members of parliament – people who are in positions to
vote on motions for positive change. If you’re in the know on and issue and you
think the council member is not, then inform them!
You may also want to let retailers know why you’re
opting out of their products, but in the case of big multi-national
corporations, don’t expect to see much more than a scripted, copy and paste
response from them. In the case of the viral ‘plastic protest’ video, the
customers aren’t really opting-out of the products, so the argument for leaving
the packaging on the counter is confused.
Leaving plastic product packaging at the counter is, in my opinion, akin to leaving a big steaming turd on someone’s doorstep – it is only going to incite annoyance and anger, but does not offer any solutions to the waste problem. It is an act of despair, of waving hands in the air and saying ‘What can we do, it’s all your fault!’ At best, such action might prompt discussion, albeit confused discussion.
Leaving plastic product packaging at the counter is, in my opinion, akin to leaving a big steaming turd on someone’s doorstep – it is only going to incite annoyance and anger, but does not offer any solutions to the waste problem. It is an act of despair, of waving hands in the air and saying ‘What can we do, it’s all your fault!’ At best, such action might prompt discussion, albeit confused discussion.
Activism can be a useful strategy to push for broader
shifts towards low-waste lifestyles and processes, but such actions will be
more effective if they are solutions focused and not simply buck-passing. A great
example the sort of positive activism that I mean, can be seen in Plastic Wise
Taroona, who approached local, medium-sized supermarkets and negotiated for
them to ditch plastic shopping bags, whilst offering reusable cloth bags
instead. This action was collaborative, co-operative and mutually beneficial to
businesses, customers and the local environment. I’d love to see similar,
innovative solutions and cooperative approaches put in place to address waste
problems elsewhere.
As parents, Lauren and I encourage our children to
take responsibility for themselves, and for their waste. We don’t want them to
feel helpless in the world, or to constantly pass the buck on issues that they
can actively control. We’d rather they problem-solve, and we encourage them to
be self-reliant. The goal posts of this planet are constantly changing and so
we want to equip our children such that they can adapt to changing times, with
novel solutions.
~ Oberon
~ Oberon
Thank you and your family so much. I came here looking for some hope and a connection to others who feel similar to me. Thanks for restoring my resolve to continue having hope and knowing I'm not alone.
ReplyDeleteI've left insta for my mental health but I do miss all your posts and stories.
Cheers Kate