Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byRebecca Pollard Modified over 11 years ago
1
Successful Waste Prevention Strategies Grocery Industry Initiatives
2
Electronic communications reduce paper waste Food-banking prevents wasteful disposal of foods Grocery retailers and food manufacturers – primary food-bank supporters A huge industry commitment
3
Grocery Industry Initiatives Plastic Pallets Significantly greater number of trips or reuses vs. wood pallets Bulk foods – produce and natural foods Significantly reduces reliance on packaging
4
Grocery Industry Initiatives Growing volume of case-ready perishable foods Meats Produce Shrink-wrapping reduces reliance on cardboard and other more bulky, wasteful packaging
5
Successful Waste Prevention Strategies Hannaford Supermarket Innovations
6
Hannaford Supermarkets Innovations Customer Reusable Fabric Bag Program Distinctive, practical, durable reusable bags Over two million sold Refund-for-Reuse Bag Program Customers receive 5 cents for reuse of each fabric bag Popular with customers, easy Saves plastic and paper bags
7
Hannaford Supermarkets Innovations Reusable Plastic Shipping Crates Tens of thousands used everyday for shipping merchandise to stores Rx bottle recycling – reusing crates over and over = 0 waste Reduces wasteful use of cardboard & other materials Closed loop Shrink Control By Efficient Ordering
8
Hannaford Supermarkets Innovations Food Waste Disposal Hierarchy – less than 10% of food waste goes to landfills Top Priority – Food Banks receive ALL safe, edible non-salable foods Non-edible-by-humans, but safe bulk food wastes go to animal feed Compost Waste disposal
9
Barriers to Successfully Implementing Waste Prevention
10
Resistance to Change Consumer education – key Manufacturer motivations – new product introductions Global economy Cost Prohibitions Over-packaging vs. security, food safety & consumer protection
11
Barriers… Natural Reliance on our abundant resources Competitive vs. collaborative forces Consumer demand
12
Barriers… Understanding the greatest contributors to waste: Plastics & polystyrene (Styrofoam) Contaminated paper & wood fiber Glass, metal
13
Waste Prevention Where Could Vermont Focus? First identify – go after low hanging fruit Prioritize initiatives Focus on visible, user-friendly, tangible WINS Rethink and refresh through EDUCATION Reduce-Reuse-Recycle – Primarily REDUCE Share new ideas to stimulate change Create incentives to achieve objectives
14
Waste Prevention Efforts Encourage Local Involvement Solutions unique to Vermont Vermont-produced products Made in Vermont Closed loop works best locally Start with small steps
15
Key Grocery - Waste Prevention Strategies Encourage SUSTAINABILITY Culture Invest in future REDUCING waste – best for business Best ROI LEADERSHIP beyond compliance Innovation by suppliers
16
Key Strategies 0 Waste – A good goal, but Must be realistic Take one step at a time Measure and report progress Be willing to adjust and change
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.