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ASDA TEAMS UP WITH RANGEME TO FIND INNOVATIVE SUPPLIERS

Big four UK grocer Asda has partnered with RangeMe to ensure buying teams have access to thousands of the most relevant products their customers demand. Through RangeMe’s global sourcing platform, Asda is aiming to increase the number of new and innovative products available in stores as it seeks emerging suppliers.

Asda is the first of the big four grocers to join RangeMe since the platform launched in the UK last month. This gives Asda an opportunity to grow its supplier base while RangeMe firmly plants its flag in the UK.

RangeMe first launched in 2014 and is used today by over 12,000 retail buyers in the UK, North America, and APAC region. It has quickly established itself as the industry leader for retail product discovery and sourcing, becoming the world’s biggest platform where brands can showcase their products to retail buyers.

RangeMe helps retailers and their buying teams scale product sourcing efforts through streamlined submissions, easy to use discovery tools, and an industry standard pitch process. Buyers can then filter searches to find brands and products that meet their exact sourcing needs, allowing them to seamlessly connect and collaborate with suppliers, and offering curated collections to help identify and understand category trends and emerging brands.

Ben Smith, Senior Director of Commercial Strategy at Asda, said: “We’ve already received hundreds of product pitches from really exciting, emerging suppliers as a result of our partnership with RangeMe. Through the launch of Asda’s incubator programme, we hope to work with some of these suppliers to get their products onto the shelves in our stores. We have a reputation for championing trend-led and innovative products, which this platform is enabling us to source at scale, so we can quickly find and introduce new products into our stores.” 

“Asda is an iconic British retailer and supermarket chain and we welcome them to our community of top retailers from around the world to transform their product sourcing experience. This is also an excellent opportunity for suppliers to connect directly with Asda buyers and showcase their products” said Nicky Jackson, CEO of RangeMe.

Nicky Jackson added: “Our mission has always been to empower retailers and suppliers to be productive and successful whatever their objective. The platform offers retailers hyper local choices as well as innovative global options. We exist to help them offer an extraordinary experience for their customers.”

Asda recently announced it will launch a supplier incubation programme, aimed at supporting more emerging brands, discovering innovative products and working with suppliers who might not come from a ‘traditional’ retail supply base but can offer something different to customers.

The programme will utilise RangeMe to help source products, giving suppliers a front-row audience with one of the biggest names in retail.

 

ICELAND FOODS SET TO BE THE UK’S FIRST PLASTIC NEUTRAL SUPERMARKET

Iceland Foods today announces its commitment to become the first UK supermarket to offset its entire remaining plastic footprint. The industry-leading move means recovering and recycling environmental and nature-bound waste plastic equal in weight to the supermarket’s residual plastic footprint. Iceland remains committed to eliminating its own-label plastic consumption entirely, as per the waste hierarchy of ‘reduction first’.

Iceland will partner with Seven Clean Seas who are designing a bespoke, multi-project, global programme for the supermarket to achieve plastic neutral status by funding and establishing the recovery and, where possible, recycling of environmental and nature-bound mixed waste plastic. This will take place via community and municipal collections and environmental interception The projects will focus on developing countries with the highest waste leakage, in order to create exponential impact.

Iceland Managing Director Richard Walker is calling for a standardised system and certification for nature-bound plastic recovery and offsetting that ensures the integrity of the approach and allows more businesses to react immediately to the UNEP assessment, which provides the strongest scientific argument to date for the urgency of acting, and for collective action to protect and restore our oceans.

Iceland remains committed to being plastic-free across its own label packaging and the retailer has continued to deliver a leading innovation programme of over 100 reduced plastic and plastic-free pilots in its stores – developing, testing and innovating to introduce alternatives to plastic. As a result, Iceland continues to make progress towards its goal, reporting a 29% overall reduction in plastic packaging across its own label range since its base year of 2017[2]. To date 3,794 tonnes of plastic have now been removed completely.

Richard Walker, Managing Director of Iceland, said:

“The UN Global Assessment of Marine Litter and Plastic Pollution is stark –plastic pollution is out of control and a major threat ecologically, to our climate and to human health. We are committed on our journey to become plastic-free across our own label range, but we need to do more than that and we need to do it immediately.

We all know that, in the long term, the industry cannot recycle or offset its way out of the plastic crisis and, while we remain firmly fixed on plastic reduction, this is another important milestone in our journey to becoming plastic-free. I would ask our other supermarkets to urgently consider becoming plastic neutral as they too look to turn down the tap on plastic production altogether.

Between 1950 and 2017 the world produced 9.2 billion tonnes of plastic, of which 7 billion tonnes have become plastic waste. To address this huge global challenge, we are asking every Iceland supplier to join our initiative in order to magnify the scale impact that we can achieve.

At the same time, we want to see a standardised international system of accounting and crediting to ensure the future integrity of nature-bound plastic recovery and offsetting. We recognise its value as part of a robust business plan to reduce plastic, and the great work undertaken by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi)[3] across carbon shows what can be achieved by the creation of standardised independently verifiable frameworks.

Three years on, our pledge to become plastic-free across our own range remains ambitious. Plastic use and waste has increased through the pandemic and we are just one business challenging the $580 billion global plastic industry. However, we are privately owned and can be agile, so we have decided to invest our own money to become permanently plastic neutral as we progress to becoming plastic-free.

Whilst we may not achieve our target by the end of 2023, due to setbacks caused by the pandemic and lack of commercially viable innovation, we remain focused on our target and will not stop until we have delivered what we set out to.”

Thomas Peacock-Nazil, Chief Executive and Founder of ocean cleanup organisation Seven Clean Seas said: “Our partnership with Iceland comes at a pivotal time for ocean pollution and the action they are taking reflects the urgency of the situation. This investment is transformational – it will enable us to generate enormous environmental and social impact whilst protecting our oceans, the Earth’s most important ecosystem from plastic pollution. We are hopeful that it will prompt other retail brands to minimise their plastic footprints and take a more conscientious approach to managing their plastic consumption.”

Hugo Tagholm, Chief Executive and Founder of marine conservation charity Surfers Against Sewage said: “It is crucial that businesses play their part in turning the tide against plastic, adopting progressive measures to reduce their plastic footprint. Eliminating plastics is of course the ultimate goal, however other additional measures to contain, collect and recycle plastics are also currently vital. Beach cleaners will be the first to tell you this. As Iceland continues in its journey to reduce and ultimately remove plastic from own label ranges, its investment in plastic neutrality will go some way in ridding our oceans of the plastic which has become so prolific in our daily lives.”

Iceland continues to be completely transparent about its plastics packaging consumption – in 2019 it was the first UK retailer to publish its total plastic packaging footprint, and continues to do this each year.

[1]  From Pollution to Solution: A global assessment of marine litter and plastic pollution. Published by the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP) published on October 21, 2021.

[2] Iceland Annual Plastic Report 2019

[3] The Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) drives climate action in the private sector by enabling companies to set science-based emissions reduction targets. https://sciencebasedtargets.org/

MEMBERS BEWARE! – FRAUDULENT EMAILS REGARDING CHINESE CUSTOMS (GACC)

Members should be aware of the following scam, recently highlighted by Defra concerning ‘registration’ for Chinese customs (GACC):

Our Market Access team yesterday came across some fraudulent emails, whereby businesses are being prompted to pay up to £10,000 for ‘registration’ for Chinese customs (GACC). It all looks quite convincing, but please be advised that this is a scam:

  • China/GACC do not charge for registration/approval listing.
  • Exporters of meat, dairy and fish must follow the existing official UK procedures for registration via APHA/DAERA/Defra.
  • Other sectors that are required to self-register should only use  http://www.singlewindow.cn/.

 

Any further specific cases should be referred to the relevant Fraud Office.

 

CONSULTATION ON REVISION OF EU ANIMAL WELFARE LEGISLATION

The European Commission has published a consultation on revising the EU animal welfare legislation.

In 2020 the Commission started a fitness check of the current rules on the welfare of animals at farm, during transport and at slaughter. This is set to be concluded in 2022 but available information to date points to weaknesses in the design, implementation, compliance and enforcement of the EU animal welfare legislation.

The current rules seem to be outdated considering new science and technology, and the lack of clarity of certain provisions results in divergence across EU Member States. This creates an uneven playing field for EU business operators and poses additional challenges for enforcement by the competent authorities.

In addition, consumers are not properly and clearly informed about the conditions under which animals are kept and are therefore prevented from making informed purchase choices of “animal welfare friendly products”. Several different animal welfare labelling schemes have also emerged, which causes confusion.

This revision therefore aims to ensure a higher level of animal welfare, broaden the scope of the EU animal welfare legislation, align it with the latest scientific evidence and current political priorities as well as citizen’s expectations and make it easier to enforce.

The closing date for feedback is 21st January 2022 (midnight Brussels time)

ANTIMICROBIAL RESISTANCE: WHAT IS THE RISK OF SPREAD THROUGH ANIMAL TRANSPORT?

The European Food Standards Agency (EFSA) has announced that it has begun work on a new assessment looking at the risk of antimicrobial resistant bacteria spreading during animal transport.

The European Parliament’s Committee on the Environment, Public Health and Food Safety requested the assessment be carried out and it will focus on the risk of resistant zoonotic bacteria spreading among poultry, pigs and cattle during transport to other farms or to slaughterhouses.

When antimicrobial resistance (AMR) occurs in zoonotic bacteria, it is known to compromise the effective treatment of infectious diseases in humans.

Marta Hugas, EFSA’s Chief Scientist, said: “Resistance to antimicrobials is an urgent public health threat, and evidence-based advice is critical to developing policy and legislation to meet this challenge.

“This new mandate – which focuses on the possible implications for human health –  illustrates once again the growing convergence between animal and human health and the need for a One Health approach by assessors and policymakers.”

As well as investigating the factors that can cause the spread of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria through transport, EFSA will also review preventive measures and control options, and identify data needs to support further analysis of the issue. The final scientific opinion is expected to be finalised by September 2022.

FRANCE TO BAN FRUIT AND VEGETABLES IN PLASTIC PACKAGING FROM 2022

On October 11th the French Government announced that it will ban the sale of nearly all fruit and vegetables in plastic packaging from 1st January 2022 in an effort to reduce plastic waste in the country.

The ban will be extended to all fruit and vegetables by June 2026, allowing time for “alternative solutions” to plastic wrappings to be found.

The list contains around 30 fruits and vegetables including leeks, courgettes, aubergines, peppers, cucumbers, potatoes, carrots, round tomatoes, onions, turnips, cabbages and cauliflowers. Fruits include apples, pears, oranges, kiwis, and lemons, must also be sold in reusable or recyclable packaging.

The government said it expects to prevent the use of more than one billion plastic packages a year with the new regulation.

You can read more here

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