Are retailers heading towards a zero plastic strategy ?

Plastic is derived from fossil fuels and often made for a single use. It ends up in landfills and in all oceans, infiltrating all living creatures (including us) in the form of tiny “micro” particles. In 2018, plastic is no longer fantastic. In 2018, retailers are exploring plastic elimination in their supply chain.

Through . Published on 02 June 2018 à 23h12 - Update on 14 October 2022 à 10h43

The ecological pressures seem less critical than protection of very slim margins for many retailers, who are facing the fierce competition of well-funded rivals such as Amazon, Ocado, Alibaba, JD and Google. Businesses are preoccupied with survival, redesigning their entire processes throughout all facets of omnichannel shopping. However, investing in alternatives and plastic reduction is good for business. As the global population nearly tripled in 70 years (from 2.6 billion in 1950 to 7.6 billion in 2017), single-use disposable plastic has become so widespread that collection and potential recycling is completely unrealistic. Now present in every ocean and land, plastic waste infiltrates all food chains and passes into all living organisms. Single-use products (Plastic bottles, yoghurt pots, etc.) are at the heart of the debate, as they can be recycled only a small number of times (unlike glass,…