Waitrose to stop selling plastic toys in Christmas crackers from 2020

John Lewis Partnership also plans to reduce amount of glitter in products sold

John Lewis and Waitrose are to stop selling Christmas crackers containing plastic toys and puzzles as part of a drive to reduce single-use plastics – but not until 2020.

The retailers will announce on Monday that they would switch next year to crackers filled with toys and other items made from recyclable materials such as metal and paper, with the cardboard wrappers embossed rather than decorated with plastic glitter.

With 65 days to go until Christmas, John Lewis has also joined the wider crackdown on glitter by reducing the the amount used to decorate its own-brand range of Christmas wrapping paper, gift bags and tags, advent calendars and crackers by two-thirds.

Standard glitter is made from etched aluminium bonded to polyethylene terephthalate – a form of damaging microplastic that can enter the oceans and pose a danger to people and animals.

Environmental campaigners have described the product – popular at Christmas to add sparkle to stationery and decorations – as an environmental scourge and called for it to be banned.

Leading retailers have argued it is difficult to change product lines quickly as they are typically ordered more than a year in advance.

Dan Cooper, the head Christmas buyer at John Lewis, said: “Reducing the amount of single-use plastic in products and packaging is really important to us and our customers. One of the challenges I face as a buyer is that we plan 18 months ahead, so it takes time for changes to become a reality. I’m always searching for new, more sustainable products which will make Christmas sparkle but won’t end up spoiling our environment.”

This year, the retailer is selling three designs of “fill your own” crackers, which are becoming its most popular crackers, accounting for one in every three packets sold.

Separately, it has removed the plastic wrapping from most individual cards it sells, which it estimates will save 8 tonnes of plastic a year.

In December last year, Waitrose was the first leading UK retailer to pledge to ban glitter from all own-brand products. The supermarket chain said its own-label cards, wraps, crackers, tags, flowers and plants would either be glitter-free or use an environmentally friendly alternative by 2020.

Tesco has switched to a plastic-free version for its Christmas trees, plants and flowers this year, also removing it from this year’s own-brand wrapping paper, tags and single Christmas cards. The discount chain Aldi has scrapped plastic glitter from this year’s Halloween range as well as from festive cards and wrapping paper.

In August, Marks & Spencer announced it was banning glitter from this year’s Christmas cards, wrapping paper, calendars and crackers.

Supermarkets are reflecting wider moves in society, with the BBC TV show Strictly Come Dancing banning the use of traditional glitter last year and growing numbers of nursery schools and music festivals also ending their use of the product.

Contributor

Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs correspondent

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Waitrose steps up action to remove plastic bags
Bags for fruit and veg to be replaced by compostable versions and 5p bags to be axed

Haroon Siddique

14, Sep, 2018 @11:01 PM

Article image
Tesco joins crackdown on plastic glitter for 2019 Christmas range
Retailer opts for biodegradable alternative but calls for extensive ban continue

Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs correspondent

04, Aug, 2019 @11:01 PM

Article image
Waitrose to ban glitter from own-brand products by 2020
Retailer says it will find other ways to make products sparkle in effort to stem plastic waste

Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs correspondent

14, Dec, 2018 @2:38 PM

Article image
Can a Waitrose shopper’s gaze boost loose produce and cut plastic waste?
A supermarket is using eye-tracking technology to find what messaging encourages take-up of unpackaged fruit and veg

Zoe Wood

05, Apr, 2024 @1:00 PM

Article image
All that glitters: UK retailers shift away from plastic Christmas
Manufacturers and shops remove millions of pieces of single-use plastic from their ranges

Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs correspondent

22, Dec, 2020 @7:00 AM

Article image
Supermarket shoppers can get their Christmas dinner for £20 – survey
Cost of buying 11 festive ingredients comes to £19.82 if consumers shop around across Aldi, Lidl, Asda, Morrisons and Iceland

Rebecca Smithers

30, Nov, 2016 @1:00 AM

Article image
And bake … UK households embrace cooking up DIY Christmas treats
Surge in sales of key festive ingredients and cooking utensils as pandemic home-baking trend continues

Sarah Butler

05, Dec, 2020 @8:00 AM

Article image
Waitrose voted UK's best supermarket
Upmarket grocer tops Which? customer satisfaction survey for third successive year while Asda languishes at bottom of table

Rebecca Smithers Consumer affairs correspondent

16, Feb, 2017 @12:01 AM

Article image
Waitrose and Aldi to stop selling disposable barbecues
More than a million single-use grills end up in UK landfill each year

Helena Horton Environment reporter

09, Mar, 2022 @6:20 PM

Article image
Supermarkets under pressure to reveal amount of plastic they create
Leading UK retailers say information is too ‘commercially sensitive’ to reveal, following Guardian report they make almost 1m tonnes a year

Matthew Taylor and Sandra Laville

18, Jan, 2018 @1:12 PM