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Sunday, 2 October 2016
UK opens its first ‘waste supermarket’
Shoppers are reaping the rewards by spending loose change to buy stock thrown out by top supermarket chains – following the opening of the UK’s first food waste shop. The supermarket, in a warehouse in Pudsey, Leeds West Yorks., is made up of shelves, pallets and domestic fridges. Stock includes basics such as bread, both branded and supermarket own, fruit and veg, chocolate, as well as packaged sandwiches, luxury items such as capers and prosecco, and even pulled pork rolls from Greggs. There are bunches of flowers, a freezer full of meat good and pre-packaged pies, and also large boxes of noodles and soya spread on offer, pallets of flour alongside massive jars of mayonnaise and mustard.
The food is all priced on a ‘pay as you feel’ basis – and a bucket for donations holds a majority of coppers with a few pound coins in for good measure. The initiative set up in Pudsey, West Yorks., by food waste campaigners Real Junk Food Project has already helped desperate families to feed their children. Customers who attend ‘The Warehouse’ store are invited to shop for food thrown out by supermarkets and other businesses.
Signs around the aisles tell visitors: ‘The average UK family wastes £50 in food every week’.
“At the moment we are opened about 9-5, seven days a week.
“Fresh stuff probably is the first to go, we are very low at the moment but because there is less of that some of the other stuff is going which is less likely to go.
“We can never really get rid of all the bread, it’s over produced. The really bad thing is all the stuff we throw out we have to pay to get taken away.
Real Junk Food Project have said they will be opening stores in Sheffield, South Yorks., and Bradford, West Yorks., in the future.
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