Posts Tagged supermarkets

Sell-by dates past their sell-by date?

expireddate

As part of the publicity surrounding yesterday’s launch of the DEFRA report and public consultation on food security, Hilary Benn suprised (and no doubt outraged) a lot of people by suggesting that shoppers should ignore “best before” dates on food to reduce the amount thrown away,

Checking the original DEFRA announcement (July) on its food labelling review (being conducted with the FSA and WRAP), these statistics caught my attention in particular:

“consumers often lack confidence in date labelling: 53% of consumers would never eat fresh fruit and vegetables past the “best before” date; 56% would never eat bread and cakes past the “best before” date; and almost 10% leave a day’s ‘buffer’ before any date. 21% would never “take a risk” with any food close to its date, even if it appeared fine.”

It appears that a lot of us get confused between best-before dates, use-by dates, sell-by dates and display-until dates. And so we throw away food, which goes into landfill and generates harmful methane, and also puts pressure on farmers to produce more than is actually required (and that’s before you start taking over-eating into consideration).

With the world looking ahead to serious food security issues created by climate change and population explosion, the last thing we need is needless waste increasing the amount our food producers need to provide.

“Use by” dates indicate time during which food is safe to eat. “Best before” dates indicate a period in which food is of optimum quality and after which it is may still perfectly edible but may decline in quality. These are mandated by law. Sell-by and Display-until are stock control dates used by retailers and are not mandated by law.

So should the Government insist on labelling changes? Not according to Stephen Robertson of the British Retail Consortium, who said “Scrapping best-before dates won’t reduce food waste. Customer education will.”

via Sell-by dates past their sell-by date? by VegBox Recipes – ooffoo.com .

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3 thoughts from lightbulb campaigning – Greenpeace

 

 

 The European Union has finally outlawed 100W incandescent lightbulbs — the pear-shaped bulbs invented by Edison you’d use as the main light in a room. Other inefficient household lighting will follow between now and 2012, as the supply of modern bulbs (efficient halogens, CFL and LED) increases.

It’s frustrating to see how slowly the authorities and lightbulb companies are moving. But today’s milestone provides a good opportunity to think back over the lightbulb campaign (2007-2008 mostly), and what lessons it might hold for other climate campaigns.

Three things I learned from Greenpeace’s lightbulbs campaign:

1. (With apologies to Ghandi) First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they co-opt what you’re saying, then they fight you, then you win. The websites of lightbulb makers like Philips and GE were awash with eco-friendly messages in 2007. Meanwhile their EU lobby group was pushing for delays and loopholes in European efficiency regulations.

2. Asking activists to propose solutions — not only protest what’s wrong in an industry — is one thing, but companies need to figure out for themselves how to run their firms in an eco-friendly way that’s also profitable enough for their liking. I think that’s their job, not ours.

Geenpeace and others stuck to the objective — get regulation against inefficient products to save energy — and resisted the call from some journalists and industry to engage in pro-bono management consulting for the lightbulb industry, or wait for states to manage electronic and electrical properly before moving forward.

3. The lightbulb companies held together firmly about EU legislation, but we had more luck in the UK where supermarkets were targeted for stocking inefficient lightbulbs. Curry’s agreed to stock only energy savers after 2007. The EU regulations we got in the end will make up for all the others, as it improves upon the lightbulb ban which the Irish government agreed to enact.

via Greenpeace – Making Waves: 3 thoughts from lightbulb campaigning.

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