Revealed: Which manufacturers are accountable for most litter air pollution within the UK

The worst packaging polluters within the UK have been revealed by a marketing campaign group.

Read more

An annual waste audit by Surfers Against Sewage noticed 4,000 citizen scientists accumulate over 30,700 items of garbage alongside coastlines, canal paths and metropolis streets.

Read more

Just 12 firms had been accountable for 70% of the gadgets that carried branding.

Read more
Read more

Coca-Cola topped the record for the fourth yr working, regardless of the corporate launching initiatives to slash plastic air pollution.

Read more

McDonald's was in second place with PepsiCo third - and altogether, the three manufacturers had been accountable for 37% of the branded air pollution collected.

Read more

Tesco, Haribo, Nestle, Heineken, Mars, Carlsberg and Red Bull had been additionally named in what Surfers Against Sewage referred to as "the dirty dozen".

Read more

Izzy Ross, the group's campaigns supervisor, described the outcomes as "shocking, but sadly not surprising" - and referred to as on massive companies to scrub up their act.

Read more

"Year on year we're seeing the same culprits responsible for disgusting amounts of plastic pollution on our beaches, and in our cities and countryside," she warned.

Read more

Surfers Against Sewage is asking on these firms to be held accountable - and take additional steps to slash their plastic use and carbon footprint.

Read more

Please use Chrome browser for a extra accessible video participant

Read more

1:51

Read more

Campaigners additionally need the federal government to implement an "all-in" deposit return scheme for drinks containers of all sizes and supplies.

Read more

While plans for a deposit return scheme have been introduced in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, it will not embody glass - and its launch has been delayed till 2025.

Read more

Ms Ross accused the federal government of "stalling", and added: "In doing so, it is condemning our ocean, beaches and rivers to a further eight billion extra pieces of plastic a year, as plastic gradually chokes these fragile ecosystems to death."

Read more

A Coca-Cola spokesperson mentioned it's clear the world is dealing with a packaging waste downside, and the drinks big has a duty to assist resolve it.

Read more

"Here in the UK, all of our bottles are already recyclable, and all of our smaller packs are made with 100% recycled plastic, excluding cap and label," they added.

Read more

McDonald's mentioned 90% of its packaging comes from recycled or renewable sources - and plastic McFlurry lids, straws, salad containers, cutlery and Happy Meal toys have all been scrapped.

Read more

PepsiCo acknowledged litter on British seashores is a "huge problem" - and it should play a "significant role" in addressing it.

Read more

The enterprise has vowed to scale back plastic used throughout all of its merchandise, and part out virgin fossil-based plastics in all crisp packets by the tip of the last decade.

Read more

Read extra local weather news:Trains v planes: What's cheaper?When will Europe heatwave end?Hetatmaps show English cities in new light

Read more

Please use Chrome browser for a extra accessible video participant

Read more

0:41

Read more

Nestle defined that plastic is used "in the interests of safety, freshness and affordability" - however it's "unacceptable for that packaging to end up as litter in the natural environment".

Read more

The firm says it is aiming for near 100% of its packaging to be designed for recycling inside two years.

Read more

And Heineken mentioned: "We understand the immediate impact of litter on the environment and we have taken some important steps to address this issue."

Read more

Tesco, Haribo, Mars, Carlsberg, Red Bull - in addition to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs - have been contacted by the PA news company for remark.

Read more

Did you like this story?

Please share by clicking this button!

Visit our site and see all other available articles!

UK 247 News