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Coles joins ANZPAC pact to tackle plastics waste

Coles As part of its ambition to be Australia’s most sustainable supermarket, Coles has today reaffirmed its commitment to packaging sustainability by joining the Australia, New Zealand and Pacific Islands Plastics Pact (ANZPAC) as a founding member. Led by The Australian Packaging Covenant Organisation (APCO), the new Pact commits Coles to four clear, actionable targets by 2025, including: eliminating unnecessary and problematic plastic packaging; ensuring 100 per cent of plastic packaging is recyclable, reusable or compostable; increasing the current volume of plastic packaging collected and effectively recycled by at least 25%; and ensuring an average of 25% recycled content is in plastic packaging across the region.[1]

Marley Spoon commits to 100% renewables by 2022

Marley Spoon commits to 100% renewables by 2022 Marley Spoon, the meal kit delivery company, is committing to 100% renewable energy by the end of 2022. SYDNEY, NSW, AUSTRALIA, May 7, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ Marley Spoon (ASX:MMM), the meal kit delivery company, is making the switch to 100 per cent renewable electricity in Australia by the end of 2022. One of Australia’s fastest-growing retailers already reached the milestone of operating carbon neutral earlier this year and is revealing its sustainability goals for the future.  The company’s sustainability objectives for the next five years will focus on four priority areas – carbon reduction, packaging, sustainable sourcing, and food waste. 

It looks like snow : how Australia plans to fix the horrifying blight of expanded polystyrene

It looks like snow : how Australia plans to fix the horrifying blight of expanded polystyrene Graham Readfearn On a two-kilometre stretch of the Yarra River east of Melbourne’s CBD a few years ago, volunteers were gathering rubbish from the banks and reeds. Among all the discarded bottles and bits of plastic sucked up with an oversized vacuum were an estimated 5 million pieces of expanded polystyrene – some in the form of tiny white balls, others in chunks at various stages of disintegration. “It is not how a river should look,” says Andrew Kelly, the fulltime Yarra riverkeeper on the ubiquity of this feather-light expanded plastic, known as EPS.

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