UK | Lidl GB has published its fourth ‘Good Food’ report, updating progress towards meeting key environmental targets and supporting communities between March 2021 and February 2023.
The report reveals that, since 2016, Lidl has reduced its food waste by almost half (43 percent). It is on track to hit its 50 percent reduction target by 2030. Providing more meals to charities - including over 6 million in 2022, surpassing the discounter’s target - has helped reach this milestone. Last year, Lidl also prevented nearly 9,000 tonnes of food waste by selling 1.7 million ‘Too Good to Waste’ boxes. Just one box from the discounter’s industry-leading initiative offers shoppers approximately 5kg of fruit and veg equivalent to a whopping 50 portions of their five-a-day.
Reducing other forms of waste has also been a key priority, and 95 percent of Lidl’s own-brand packaging is now recyclable, reusable, renewable or refillable. From loose produce to compostable fruit and veg bags that can be reused at home as food waste caddy liners to new recyclable packaging on mushrooms - sharp-eyed shoppers can spot a range of these ‘Lidl’ changes in-store.
Overall, Lidl has cut the amount of plastic packaging across its own-brand ranges by 29 percent since 2017 - with its sights set on achieving a 40 percent reduction by 2025. Through its partnership with Prevented Ocean Plastic, the discounter has also stopped the equivalent of 15 million plastic bottles from entering the ocean.
With over 90 percent of Lidl’s carbon emissions coming from its supply chain and use of its products, the retailer is also working closely with suppliers on carbon reduction projects. The discounter has partnered with The Rivers Trust and is funding three water catchment projects (increasing to nine by 2025) to mitigate risks in the supply chain.
Meanwhile, as of February 2023, 45 percent of Lidl’s British fruit and veg suppliers were LEAF Marque certified - a gold standard in sustainable farming - meaning they have robust water and nature conservation plans. This figure will reach 100 percent by the end of the year.
All of these measures support Lidl’s sustainability goals and its commitment to helping customers in their day-to-day lives; that’s why Lidl also led the way in pledging to halve the environmental impact of its customers’ shopping baskets by 2030 through the WWF’s Retailers’ Commitment for Nature.
Mark Newbold, Senior CSR Manager at Lidl GB, said that Lidl strives to work in a way that benefits its people, producers, and the planet. This means finding new, more sustainable ways to deliver quality and value for shoppers.
“Little changes make a big difference – and we know they matter to our customers,” said Newbold.
“From making more of our packaging recyclable and incorporating circularity into how we operate to increasing the amount of food we donate to our charity partners, we’re proud to have made such positive strides and doubled to meet our ambitious goals.”
Lidl GB has always been on the front foot and continues to look at how technology and innovation can help meet its sustainability goals. For example, the discounter was the first to trial smart refills in 2022. With nearly 100 percent of customers likely to recommend the refill solution, the discounter is assessing its potential for scalability and cross-retailer standardisation.
Lidl is also trialling the Eco-Score environmental rating for products - the first UK retailer to do so - making labels more transparent and empowering shoppers to make sustainable choices.
