Asda is committed to ceasing to use single-use plastic bags with its online grocery orders in order to save approximately 500 tons of plastic per year.
The supermarket has announced that it will eliminate the possibility of "bagged" delivery of all home deliveries and send orders nationwide from 31 July.
Asda estimates the move, which follows a test drive in south-west England and its Dartford Home shopping center, will cut approximately 85 million plastic bags from production each year.
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For health and safety reasons, any meat or fresh fish will always be placed in a small plastic bag, but the supermarket has announced its intention to train staff to minimize it.
"We strive to reduce the amount of preventable plastic whenever we can. Because it helps us reduce its impact on the environment and we know it, that's important for our customers as well, "said Simon Gregg, Vice President of Online Purchasing for Asda.
"It's a simple change, but one that will have a significant impact on the amount of plastic we use as a business."
The supermarket claimed that it would be the first to eliminate its single-use plastic bags, after stopping selling 5-bag bags in its stores by the end of 2018.
After reducing approximately 290 million plastic bags in stores last year, Asda will produce a total of 375 million fewer bags each year as a result of its latest reduction.
The removal of the supermarket's plastic bags from its online shopping site is the latest decision taken by the retailer to combat plastic pollution and food waste.
Earlier this year, the retailer announced that it had removed 6,500 tons of plastic packaging of its own brand since February 2018.
Last month, a survey by consumer group Which? found that almost half of the packaging used by large UK supermarkets can not be easily recycled.
Asda Commercial supermarket (Getty Images)
This makes it difficult for customers to dispose of their waste properly and increases the risk of disposing of it in landfills, researchers said.
For the study, researchers badyzed the packaging of 46 popular supermarket items, including Aldi, Asda, Co-op, Marks & Spencer and Tesco.
According to which ?, the products are deemed easy to recycle if they can be placed in a domestic recycling center and recovered by the council.
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Their findings showed that 52% of packaging met these requirements, including cardboard, glbad and plastic parts.
But 42% of all supermarket packaging was labeled incorrectly or not at all.