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Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
National
Becca Field & Katie Williams

Morrisons announces new ban on packaging from its second most sold item

Morrisons is banning plastic bags from a popular item.

As we become more ethically aware, more companies are doing their bit to reduce their carbon footprint.

Morrisons have announced that they will be scrapping the plastic bags from all their bananas sold in store.

Packaged bananas are the second most commonly bought item in Morrisons and it will be the first supermarket to remove the plastic from the fruit.

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Instead, a paper band will be used in an effort to reduce the store's use of plastic, Cambridge reports.

As a result, 45 million single-use plastic bags (180 tonnes of plastic) will be removed from Morrisons stores a year.

This comes after a successful trial for 12 weeks that has removed over two million pre-packed plastic bags to date.

The new strengthened paper bands, made from FSC certified paper, will ensure that banana bunches remain intact. The bands will feature: Country of Origin; Rainforest Alliance, Fairtrade and Soil Association Certification information; and, barcodes.

Their rollout will be completed in six months.

The ban is part of Morrisons' drive to reduce plastic and revert back to traditional grocery packaging methods.

Morrisons recently launched a glass milk bottle trial in which bottles of milk are delivered directly to its supermarkets by local dairy farms. Once returned by customers, the bottles are collected, sanitised and can be reused for ten years or more.

Morrisons was also the first supermarket to reintroduce paper and string bags for fruit and veg, to provide sturdy paper carrier bags at checkouts and to refill customer containers at its Market Street counters, to avoid single-use plastic packaging.

Elio Biondo, Banana Buyer from Morrisons, said: “Bananas have their own packaging - their skins. They also grow in bunches which generally means they don’t need bagging together. So a simple sturdy paper band is the ideal alternative. In trials the quality of the bananas has remained the same, so this switch out of plastic is a no-brainer.”

Morrisons has committed to a 50 per cent reduction across its own brand primary plastic packaging by 2025. Initiatives introduced over the last 12 months will remove 8,000 tonnes of unnecessary or problematic plastic each year. Eighty-three per cent of Morrisons own-brand plastic packaging is now able to be recycled.

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