Food and drink businesses make great strides towards sustainability
PRESS RELEASE
Food and drink manufacturers and retailers can make big changes to their
environmental impact by working together, innovating and investing in
sustainability
initiatives.
At today's joint briefing between the All-Party Parliamentary Food and Drink
Manufacturing Group and the All-Party Retail Group, politicians and members of
the
Food and Drink Federation (FDF)[1] and the British Retail Consortium (BRC)[2] met to discuss how larger manufacturers and retailers are innovating and
investing to achieve sustainable growth and environmental benefits through
changes in
processes used.
Speakers included John Stevenson MP, Chair of the All-Party
Parliamentary Food and Drink Manufacturing Group, Anne McIntosh MP, Chair of
the
EFRA Select Committee, and Joan Walley MP, Chair of the Environmental Audit
Committee.
Earlier this year grocery think-tank IGD and the Waste & Resources Action
Programme (WRAP) reported on a waste reduction project involving UK food
manufacturers
and retailers working in partnership to improve sustainability in the supply
chain. Between December 2009 and February 2011, participants eliminated 1,400t
of
waste and collectively believe that a further 1,193t could be eradicated within
a
year.[3]
FDF members have committed to reducing CO2 emissions by 35%, compared to a 1990
baseline, and water use by 20%, compared to 2007 figures, by 2020. FDF members
have also halved food waste to landfill and hope to achieve zero waste to
landfill by 2015.)[4].
BRC retail members have halved the amount of waste they send to landfill
compared with five years ago. Retailers have also achieved an 18 per cent
reduction
between 2005 and 2010 in both energy-related emissions from buildings and
carbon
dioxide emissions from transporting goods.
All-Party Parliamentary Food and Drink Manufacturing Group Chair, John
Stevenson, said:
“Sustainable business growth is an integral part of the Government's growth
agenda and is essential to the long-term future of the food and drink industry,
its
customers and the UK as a whole. Working in partnership, the food and drink
manufacturing and retail sectors are making great strides in the area of
sustainability, in particular in reducing CO2 emissions, cutting water, food
and
packaging
waste, and reducing food miles.”
Notes to Editors
- The Food and Drink Federation (FDF) is the voice of the food and drink
manufacturing industry – the UK's largest manufacturing sector. For more
information
about FDF and the industry we represent visit: www.fdf.org.uk.
- The British Retail Consortium (BRC) is the leading voice of the retail sector,
representing small and independent stores through to the large multiples,
selling food and non-food products and services, and operating on the High
Street, out
of town, in community and rural shops and online. The BRC's sustainability
initiative, A Better Retailing Climate, launched in 2008, sets out the sector's
collective environmental ambitions. The commitment's five goals reflect the
wide
impact of retail, both in our own operations but also on our stakeholders, most
notably customers and suppliers. We plan to launch our next progress report in
January 2012.
- WRAP report 'Reducing food waste through Retail Supply Chain collaboration'
(March 2011)
-
FDF's Five-fold Environmental Ambition Progress Report 2010
More information
- FDF Press team
-
Nicki Hunt on or 020 7420 7132 - nicki.hunt@fdf.org.uk
-
Rebecca Wilhelm or 020 7420 7140 - rebecca.wilhelm@fdf.org.uk
-
Sarah Jenkinson or 020 7420 7131 - sarah.jenkinson@fdf.org.uk
-
Anna Taylor or 020 7420 7118 - anna.taylor@fdf.org.uk