Tesco lags rivals in food waste crack down

By Rod Addy

- Last updated on GMT

All the major grocery retailers are working hard to crack down on food waste
All the major grocery retailers are working hard to crack down on food waste

Related tags Food waste Supermarket

Tesco has moved to crack down on food waste as it emerged it is lagging behind other grocery retailers in the crucial area of bagged salads, according to its own data.

Figures revealed by Tesco indicate 68% of all salad grown for bagged salad ends up being wasted, with 35% of that waste occurring at home.

As a result, the supermarket giant has committed to ending multi-buy promotions, such as buy-one-get-one-frees (bogofs) for bagged salads, which it claims help create waste, instead moving to mix-and-match offers.

However, in statements sent to FoodManufacture.co.uk, Sainsbury claimed it made the same move a year ago and Waitrose indicated it had also followed the same course for some time.

“We stopped ‘buy-one-get-one-free’ promotions on produce over a year ago, when we began offering ‘mix & match’ across our produce range, which allows customers to receive the value of a multi-buy without causing waste,”​ said a spokeswoman for Sainsbury.

A spokeswoman for Waitrose said: We focus our special offers for short life goods, such as fruit and vegetables, through 'mix and match' promotions so customers can choose a selection of produce and not end up with too much of the same thing.”

‘Waved goodbye to bogofs’

And a spokeswoman for Asda said it had “waved goodbye to bogofs”​ in 2008, while Morrisons claims it applies a sensible approach to promotions to minimise waste.

Sainsbury, Asda and Waitrose confirmed they had eliminated all food waste going to landfill last year. Details were unavailable from Morrisons as this article was published.

Sainsbury said it sent all surplus food to local charities and had donated more than 10M meals to over 400 UK charities last year. Asda launched a similar scheme with charity Fareshare earlier this year and Waitrose said it engaged in parallel initiatives.

All three retailers said they either turned the remaining food into energy through anaerobic digestion, if inedible, or sent it for use as animal feed.

Other waste-reducing schemes launched by Waitrose included developing smaller packs of salad for its convenience stores, which cut the amount of unsold bagged salad by one third, slashing waste by 80% in some cases.  

The Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) has continuously worked with all major supermarket chains and food and drink manufacturers to reduce supply chain waste and plans to report on progress next month.

First major retailer to publish total food waste figures

WRAP commended Tesco for being the first major UK retailer to publish its own total food waste figures.

WRAP director Richard Swannell said:  “We welcome Tesco’s approach to tackling food waste across their whole supply chain, and by identifying the hot spots, they can tackle these areas effectively.

“Food waste is a global issue and collaborative action is essential if we are to successfully reduce food waste and reap the financial and environmental benefits of doing so.”

Tesco said its announcement today was just the beginning. Other initiatives included developing new varieties of grapes with longer lives, launching a temperature control system enabling bananas to last longer in transit and cutting waste in its bakeries.

It has also removed ‘display until’ dates from its fresh fruit and vegetables and was working to cultivate more pest- and disease-resistant apple varieties, it said.

These efforts have been prompted by further figures from the supermarket chain indicating 40% of its apples, just under half of all its bakery items, 25% of its grapes and 20% of its bananas are wasted.

Tesco estimated that 28,500t of food waste was generated in its stores and distribution centres this year.

Related topics Supply Chain Fresh produce

Related news

Show more

Related products

Carbon Reduction for Large Energy Users

Carbon Reduction for Large Energy Users

Content provided by ESB Energy | 12-Nov-2021 | Product Brochure

ESB Energy Business Solutions can help you meet your companies carbon targets by 2050. We offer a range of sustainable tailored solutions to reduce the...

1 comment

End Grocery Waste

Posted by Rod Averbuch,

The consumer might be the weakest link of the fresh food supply chain. The supermarkets could encourage the consumers to participate in global environmental sustainability efforts.

The large amount of fresh food waste is a lose-lose situation for retailer, the environment, and the struggling families in today’s tough economy. The excess inventory of perishable food items close to their expiration on supermarket shelves causes waste.

Why not let the consumer support the perishables rotation in the supermarket by offering him purchasing incentives for perishables approaching their expiration dates?

There is a new GS1 DataBar global standard that enables an automatic incentive offering application for fresh food close to its expiration.

The 'End Grocery Waste' application, which is based on the GS1 DataBar standard, encourages efficient consumer shopping behavior that maximizes grocery retailer revenue and makes fresh food affordable for all families while effectively reducing the global carbon footprint. You can look this application up at the EndGroceryWaste site.

Report abuse

Follow us

Featured Jobs

View more

Webinars

Food Manufacture Podcast

Listen to the Food Manufacture podcast