#ChooseLoose – Facts and FAQs

FAQs

Got a question that’s not listed above? Please get in touch using the form below:


Stats and facts

Find Out Now poll commissioned for Choose Loose

  • A poll run by Find Out Now found that 69% would choose loose fruit & veg over prepackaged at their supermarket, assuming the cost was the same

  • 77% agreed or strongly agreed that supermarkets should be doing more to sell loose fruit & veg.

  • The poll found that hygiene was the main reason why people would not buy loose (31%), followed by a lack of price information (27%). Another 31% said there was no reason why they wouldn’t choose loose. 

  • People aged over 65 are more likely to choose loose (81%) compared with people aged 18-24 (53%)

  • (Sample size: 2,019)

Figures obtained from WRAP for this project

  • Selling potatoes, apples, bananas, carrots and onions loose (unpackaged) would:

    • Prevent an estimated 1.7 billion pieces of plastic packaging from being thrown away.

    • Allow people to buy the exact amount they need, and as a result, more than 77,000 tonnes of food waste would be avoided.

    • Save shoppers a combined total of over £85m per year in uneaten food

    • Stop 25,000 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions from polluting our environment

Relevant secondary research

  • In May 2022, The Big Plastic Count revealed that over 1m pieces of fruit & veg packaging were thrown away by nearly 100,000 households across the UK in one week. 

  • On average, 29% of fresh fruit & veg purchased by households in the EU is wasted. Globally, we currently waste 2.5bn tonnes of food annually – almost half (46%) of which is thrown-out fruit & veg. 

  • Between 2004 and 2015, food waste in European households almost doubled while plastic packaging increased by 25%.

  • Britons routinely bin 1.4m edible bananas every day at a cost of £80m a year. 

  • Food waste is a major source of greenhouse gas emissions, responsible for up to 10% of the world's total emissions. 

  • The production, use and disposal of plastic packaging is having a major impact on the climate crisis – predicted to contribute 15% of global emissions by 2050.