Coca-Cola, Pepsi and Nestlé named top plastic
polluters for third year in a row
Companies accused of “zero progress” on reducing
plastic waste, with Coca-Cola ranked No 1 for most littered products
Karen
McVeigh
@karenmcveigh1
Mon 7 Dec
2020 09.12 GMT
Coca-Cola,
PepsiCo and Nestlé have been accused of “zero progress” on reducing plastic
waste, after being named the world’s top plastic polluters for the third year
in a row.
Coca-Cola
was ranked the world’s No 1 plastic polluter by Break Free From Plastic in its
annual audit, after its beverage bottles were the most frequently found
discarded on beaches, rivers, parks and other litter sites in 51 of 55 nations
surveyed. Last year it was the most frequently littered bottle in 37 countries,
out of 51 surveyed.
It was found
to be worse than PepsiCo and Nestlé combined: Coca-Cola branding was found on
13,834 pieces of plastic, with PepsiCo branding on 5,155 and Nestlé branding on
8,633.
The annual
audit, undertaken by 15,000 volunteers around the world, identifies the largest
number of plastic products from global brands found in the highest number of
countries. This year they collected 346,494 pieces of plastic waste, 63% of
which was marked clearly with a consumer brand.
Coca-Cola
came under fire from environmental campaigners earlier this year when it
announced it would not abandon plastic bottles, saying they were popular with
customers. In March, Coca-Cola, PepsiCo, Nestlé and Unilever were found to be
responsible for half a million tonnes of plastic pollution in six developing
countries each year, in a survey by NGO Tearfund.
“The
world’s top polluting corporations claim to be working hard to solve plastic
pollution, but instead they are continuing to pump out harmful single-use
plastic packaging,” said Emma Priestland, Break Free From Plastic’s global
campaign coordinator.
Priestland
said the only way to halt the growing global tide of plastic litter was to stop
production, phase out single use and implement reuse systems.
“Coca-Cola,
PepsiCo, and Nestlé should be leading the way in finding real solutions to
reinvent how they deliver their products,” she said.
Up to 91%
of all the plastic waste ever generated has not been recycled and ended up
being incinerated, in landfill or in the natural environment, according to a
2017 study.
This year’s
global audit of branded plastic waste revealed that single-use sachets, which
are used to sell small volumes of products such as ketchup, coffee and shampoo,
were the most commonly found type of item, followed by cigarette butts, then
plastic bottles.
Simon
Mbata, national coordinator of the South African Waste Pickers Association,
said: “The majority of plastic we come across cannot be recycled. We find it
everywhere, in our waste stream, on our land. When it is buried, it
contaminates our soil. Whatever cannot be recycled must not be produced.”
Coca-Cola
said it was working to address packaging waste, in partnership with others, and
disputed the claim that it was making no progress.
“Globally,
we have a commitment to get every bottle back by 2030, so that none of it ends
up as litter or in the oceans, and the plastic can be recycled into new
bottles,” a spokesperson said. “Bottles with 100% recycled plastic are now
available in 18 markets around the world, and this is continually growing.”
Plastic
Waste in Verde Island, Philippines
63% of
plastic waste collected by volunteers in an annual audit was marked clearly
with a consumer brand. Photograph: Noel Guevara/Greenpeace
The
spokesperson said Coca-Cola had also reduced plastic use in secondary
packaging, and that globally “more than 20% of our portfolio comes in
refillable or fountain packaging”.
A
spokesperson for PepsiCo said the company was taking action to tackle packaging
through “partnership, innovation and investments”. They said it has set plastic
reduction goals “including decreasing virgin plastic in our beverage business
by 35% by 2025”, and was also “growing refill and reuse through businesses like
SodaStream and SodaStream Professional, which we expect will avoid 67bn
single-use plastic bottles through 2025”.
They added
that the company was investing in partnerships to increase recycling
infrastructure and collection, pledging more than $65m (£48m) since 2018.
A statement
from Nestlé said the company was making “meaningful progress” in sustainable
packaging, although it recognised more was needed: “We are intensifying our
actions to make 100% of our packaging recyclable or reusable by 2025 and to
reduce our use of virgin plastics by one-third in the same period. So far, 87%
of our total packaging and 66% of our plastic packaging is recyclable or
reusable.”


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