Zero-waste stores pop up in the US, targeting shoppers tired of all the waste
While a trip to the grocery store may conjure up images of colorful
produce, grab-and-go meals and must-have packaged snacks, another image
less likely to come to mind is tons of waste.
According to Refed, a nonprofit organization dedicated to fighting food
waste in the United States, the retail food sector generates 8 million
tons of food waste a year. Additionally, there is a great deal of
packaging waste. Food is shipped in boxes. It sits on the grocery shelf
often wrapped in plastic or cellophane. Consumers then carry the food
home in plastic or paper bags.
The Environmental Protection Agency estimates that containers and
packaging make up 23 percent of landfill waste, and plastic pollution is
literally strangling the life out of the ocean.
Grocers are increasingly under pressure to reduce their waste footprint.
Refed calculates the amount of food wasted by the retail sector
represents $18.2 billion a year in lost value.
"In the past this was considered the cost of doing business when sales
were easy," said Chris Cochran, executive director of ReFed. He said as
competition increased in the sector — Amazon put the entire retail
sector under tremendous margin pressure even before its purchase of
Whole Foods Market — retailers started looking for ways to cut cost and
create value.
The backlash against packaging waste, specifically plastic, also is
intensifying. The state of California banned plastic bags in 2016 and
this past April, New York's Gov. Andrew Cuomo introduced a bill to ban
plastic bags across New York State. Numerous cities and counties around
the country have bans or fees on plastic bags. As a result, grocers are
being forced to reevaluate packaging choices.
Some market entrepreneurs see a solution in the biggest store change
imaginable: designing waste out of grocery stores altogether by creating
what are known as zero-waste grocery stores. Over the last decade, some
retailers also started rethinking their waste footprint and designed
stores that encourage customers to bring their own containers. The
Refill Shoppe in Ventura California is one such store. The
self-described "eco-conscious" shop sells bath, body and household
liquids in bulk. In the food category some retailers, including The
Filling Station In New York, have dedicated their entire store to
selling just a few items in bulk. The Filling Station sells olive oil,
vinegar, salt and beer that customers purchase using refillable
containers.
While this refill model, which emphasizes reducing packaging waste, has
worked for specialty shops, larger grocery stores are trying to figure
out how to successfully apply this model to a zero-waste design. At the
grocery retail level, a commitment to zero waste means aggressively
reducing food and/or packaging waste.
The ups and downs of first US zero-waste grocery store
The nation's first zero-waste grocery store, In.gredients, opened in
2012 in Austin, Texas. It was a small grocery store, just 1,400 square
feet, with a big mission: no waste.
"The original idea was to be as package-free as possible while providing
a grocery experience," explained Erica Howard Cormier, the store's
former general manager. Most of the food was sold in bulk and housed in
gravity bins. Items for purchase included dry goods like grains and
nuts, locally sourced produce and liquids such as soap, soda, oil and
vinegar. Customers used their own packaging for almost all of the
products including eggs. Cormier said the store had a 70 percent
package-free rate with a goal to increase the percentage every year.
But the store's packaging goals came at a significant cost.
"We realized after 18 months we weren't changing shoppers habits,"
Cormier said. "You have to plan a lot to go to the grocery store with
your own containers and people would go to the store across the street
because they forgot their container."
Another reason customers shopped elsewhere was to buy must-have items
which were not available at In.gredients, like a six-pack of beer,
potato chips and turkey for Thanksgiving dinner. The store was losing
business and decided to shift its focus. It dropped the package-free
mission but maintained a commitment to zero waste by aggressively
focusing on food. "We did not send food waste to the landfill," Cormier
said. But despite its best efforts, In.gredients closed in April as a
result of low sales.
In.gredients co-founder Christian Lane still believes in the business
model and says it could work if taken to scale. "Convenience stores
aren't very big, but if you can get a number of those going and
centralize buying, marketing, accounting and human resources and all
those kinds of things, you can get economies of scale to make it work."
Lane said In.gredients was close to making the model work — it was open
for five years, supported local growers, and provided some vendors with
their first retail exposure, which led them to subsequent success— but
when the lease came up for renewal the founders decided to close the
doors, given the low sales and lack of profitability. Lane is currently
focused on another entrepreneurial endeavor — a technology consulting
business that existed before the store.
""Our goal is to only offer products that don't end up in a
landfill. We want to make it easier for consumers to make more
sustainable choices." -Lyndsey Manderson, co-founder of Zero Market
Zero-waste grocery stores have fared better around the world. Singapore
opened its first store in April and several zero-waste stores have been
open for several years across Europe, including in London, Berlin,
Vienna and Barcelona. The success and spread of these stores has given
American entrepreneurs hope that the concept can work stateside. A few
think now is the perfect time to try.
In Denver, Lyndsey Manderson co-founded the retail stop Zero Market. The
store, which opened a year ago, sells mostly bulk home and body-care
products, such as shampoo, body oils, detergent and household cleaners.
"Our goal is to only offer products that don't end up in a landfill. We
want to make it easier for consumers to make more sustainable choices,"
said Manderson. She says customers have responded positively to the
store, and by the end of the year, Manderson plans to open a second
location that will be bigger and food-based.
Denver retail store Zero Market opened a year ago and sells mostly bulk
home and body care products such as shampoo, body oils, detergent and
household cleaners. It plans to open a second location that will be
bigger and food-based.
Zero Market
Denver retail store Zero Market opened a year ago and sells mostly bulk
home and body care products such as shampoo, body oils, detergent and
household cleaners. It plans to open a second location that will be
bigger and food-based.
Meanwhile, budding food entrepreneur Sarah Metz is hoping to open up the
first zero-waste grocery store in Brooklyn, New York. It will be called
The Fillery and carry items including grains, spices and liquids, along
with cooking and home-care tools.
"Customers will shop from bulk-style bins and dispensers and be able to
buy the quantities they need," Metz said. She plans to adhere to strict
packaging policies. Metz has two personal investors who gave her just
over $100,000, and she raised an additional $17,000 on Kickstarter for
The Fillery.
But since the Kickstarter campaign in 2016, progress has been slow.
Metz, an occupational therapist who works for the New York City Board of
Education, does not have a business background. While she has been
learning the entrepreneurial ropes for the last four years and competed
in business-plan competitions, once winning $5,000, she lacks a concrete
timeline for completing the mission outlined on Kickstarter back in
2016: opening a physical zero-waste grocery store in Brooklyn.
She has found vendors, created a product list and spent the last two
years trying to secure a retail location but still has not found one.
Even if she does, she said it might require a small-business loan, which
will be difficult to secure lacking a partner with existing business
experience. Metz is set to launch The Fillery as an e-commerce store at
the end of this month.
Consumer guides exist online to highlight grocery stores where
zero-waste shopping is possible, but the options tend to be stores that
have large bulk-food sections rather than true zero-waste stores.
Grocery chains also grappling with the waste problem
The zero-waste concept is not confined to small independent shops.
Last September, Kroger, the largest supermarket chain in the United
States, with $122 billion in sales in 2017, announced a plan to
eliminate all food waste in its stores and across the company by 2025.
It spent the past year conducting a comprehensive waste analysis to help
the company better understand and measure the problem and devise an
action plan.
"Our priority is eliminating avoidable food loss within our operations,"
said Jessica Adelman, Kroger's group vice president of corporate
affairs. The company is considering automating its in-store ordering
systems across key departments to reduce over ordering of highly
perishable items. "As we get more technology in stores that allow
ordering in real time, it will be a huge help for a company of our
size," Adelman said.
Kroger's food waste efforts are focused on high-impact areas like the
produce, meat and seafood departments where most of the waste occurs.
One food waste prevention step Kroger has taken since launching its
initiative is to expand it imperfect produce program to all stores. This
program dedicates space to sell discounted imperfect produce, more
commonly known as ugly fruit and vegetables.
Adelman said once Kroger gets a handle on reducing loss internally, the
company will then turn its focus to the supply chain and take steps to
influence suppliers and customers. To help achieve its goal, the company
established a $10 million innovation fund to support food-waste
solutions. Kroger's commitment also extends to packaging waste. In
August, the company announced it was eliminating plastic bags from its
stores by 2025.
Zero-waste tactics may look different for small start-up grocers
compared to large supermarket chains, however, the industry commitment
to reducing waste is occurring at all levels. Zero-waste saves
businesses money by reducing disposal, labor and energy costs. The
concept is better for the environment because it avoids wasting water,
oil and other natural resources used to grow and deliver food, and it
helps keep oceans free of plastic pollution and reduces greenhouse gas
emissions.
"Food waste has now emerged among the top priorities at the CFO level," ReFed's Cochran said.
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