United Kingdom: to fight against waste, end the “preferably consume before”

PostedAugust 1, 2022, 5:03 PM

UKTo fight once morest waste, end the “preferably consume before”

British supermarkets Waitrose decided on Monday to remove the “best before” indication on more than 500 fresh products to prevent them from being thrown away while they are still good.

The best before date will apply to 500 fresh produce, in particular packaged fruit and vegetables, Waitrose said in a statement.

AFP

British supermarkets Waitrose announced on Monday that they were removing the best before dates on nearly 500 products. Objective: to avoid discouraging its customers from consuming food that is still good and thus to fight once morest food waste. “We estimate that removing dates from fresh fruits and vegetables might save the equivalent of 7 million baskets of food from the trash,” the chain estimates.

From September, Waitrose will remove ‘best before’ labels, an indicative date beyond which it remains safe to eat a product, on nearly 500 fresh produce, particularly fruit and vegetables under packaging, the company said in a statement. This measure “aims to reduce the volume of food waste in British households by urging customers to use their common sense”, adds the high-end chain. “Food waste is still a major problem” and British households “throw away 4.5 million tonnes of edible food every year,” said Marija Rompani, sustainability director of the John Lewis department store group, parent company of Waitrose.

In the footsteps of Tesco and Marks and Spencer

The “best before” indicator is essentially linked to the taste or nutritional quality of a product, and corresponds to the “minimum durability date” in France. On the other hand, the mention “use by” (consume before), which appears on perishable products, is an imperative mention and its non-compliance presents health risks, in the same way as the expiry date across the Channel.

The company is following in the footsteps of other British brands, such as the sector giant Tesco, which had removed the recommended consumption dates on a hundred products from 2018, or more recently Marks & Spencer which had done the same on 300 references. . Morrisons, another supermarket chain, announced in January the removal not of the recommended date but of the best before date on 90% of its private label milk, encouraging its customers to smell the contents of the bottle to know s is always good.

(AFP)

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