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Reuters
Reuters
Business
Noah Browning

I'm dreaming of a green Christmas: UK firm urges clampdown on waste

FILE PHOTO: A woman looks at Christmas decorations in a shop in Rome, Italy, December 4, 2018. REUTERS/Max Rossi/File Photo

LONDON (Reuters) - British families should wrap their Christmas presents in recyclable brown paper and make their own Christmas crackers using old toilet rolls this year to help ensure a more sustainable festive season, a leading waste company said.

Business Waste said its survey of customer habits showed "horrifying" levels of non-recyclable plastic waste being thrown out at Christmas time and urged people to use humbler, home-made substitutes.

FILE PHOTO: Christmas cards, wrapping and bags are seen for sale in Westgate shopping centre in east London August 17, 2013, 129 days before Christmas Day. REUTERS/Russell Boyce/File Photo

"Even most gift-wrapping paper contains some plastic to give it the bright sheen that people like to see under their Christmas trees," it said in a statement. The wrapping paper thrown out by Britons over the Christmas period could stretch 227,000 miles, or almost to the moon.

"The festive season creates more plastic waste than any time of year, most of which goes to landfill or is burned – all a horrifying waste of money, resources and energy", Business Waste spokesman Mark Hall said.

A full 99% of people surveyed said they threw out the plastic gifts inside Christmas crackers, the tube-shaped decorations which are pulled open with a pop.

FILE PHOTO: A woman looks over wrapping paper as she shops in a crowded toy store in New York City, December 23, 2008, the second to last shopping day before Christmas. REUTERS/Mike Segar/File Photo

"Ditch the shop-bought crackers and make your own," the statement said. "All it takes is the middle out of a loo (toilet) roll, a bit of tissue paper, and a bit of imagination for a gift."

"Don't use printed Christmas wrapping paper which can't be recycled. Use plain brown paper instead,", the firm added.

Business Waste works on behalf of some local councils and has 15,000 partner firms across the U.K. It survey canvassed 1,100 families about their Christmas habits.

Analysts say poor consumer habits, a lack of unified recycling infrastructure and gaps in technology are hampering serious efforts worldwide to reduce waste and pollution.

But television documentaries including by veteran British naturalist and broadcaster David Attenborough have helped raise global public awareness about the environmental damage wreaked by plastic waste, especially in the world's oceans.

The environment has also emerged as an important issue in the campaign for Britain's Dec. 12 parliamentary election.

British oil giant BP said last month it plans to build a $25 million pilot plant to test new technology to allow plastic bottles and food packaging to be recycled repeatedly.

(Reporting By Noah Browning; Editing by Gareth Jones)

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