Just 29% of hospitality and leisure businesses have replaced some or all of the single-use plastics their customers use with more environmentally friendly alternatives, such as reusable coffee cups, according to new research unveiled today.
On top of this, only 8% of SME businesses in the hospitality sector say they have used incentives such as purchase discounts to encourage customers to change their behaviour around single-use plastics.
These stats have been revealed as part of a YouGov survey of more than 1,000 senior decision makers in SME businesses across a range of industries, commissioned by environmental charity Keep Britain Tidy and BRITA UK.
The research reveals that Britain’s small and medium-sized businesses, including the hospitality and leisure sector, are lagging when it comes to making progress in reducing their single-use plastic footprints, despite a sustained campaign encouraging change. In fact, only half of senior decision makers (52%) say their hospitality business is doing all it can to reduce its single-use plastic waste.
The figures highlight low levels of action, with only 17% saying their organisation has taken steps to replace any single-use plastic in their supply chains in the past 12 months. Only 34% believe that their business is responsible for encouraging its customers to reduce consumption of single-use plastics, while a quarter (26%) think their business has a duty to be a leader in their sector on this issue.
When it comes to their supply chains, just 6% of hospitality businesses have audited how they use single-use plastics and only 10% have selected new suppliers based on their environmental credentials in this respect.
The research suggests that one of the key obstacles to businesses taking action is an unwillingness to take a leadership role and be a first mover in a sector, suggesting there is a driving role for trade bodies. In fact, 46% say their business is not motivated at all by the opportunity to implement change ahead of others and be a leader in single-use plastic waste prevention in their sector.
Despite 73% of senior decision makers in hospitality SMEs acknowledging that staff want to reduce their single-use plastic footprint, and 58% thinking their customers want this, internal and external action has been sluggish:
- Finding environmentally friendly alternatives that do the same job (71%) and the high cost of alternatives to single-use plastic (67%) are cited as key challenges for businesses to reduce single-use plastics
- Only 9% have installed or increased the availability of filtered drinking water taps or fountains since last summer
- Only 22% have replaced some or all of the single-use plastics staff use with reusable or non-plastic alternatives in the last 12 months
- Just 9% say their SME has run education or awareness-raising initiatives, for example communications campaigns, aimed at customers
Sarah Taylor, Managing Director of BRITA UK, said: “The last few years have seen a sea change in our awareness of the impact of single-use plastic on the marine and wider environment. It’s been exciting to see so many household name businesses take big steps to reduce their single-use plastic footprint, from providing staff with reusable alternatives, such as reusable water bottles and coffee cups, to trialling refill schemes for customers in stores. As a business this is something BRITA has been proud to be a part of. But it’s clear that smaller organisations have not been as confident at making changes, despite what their customers and staff are saying.
“The opportunity for hospitality businesses to make a real change in the industry and appeal to their customers is huge. We encourage SMEs in the sector to come together to find solutions to the challenges posed by single-use plastic.”
Allison Ogden-Newton, Keep Britain Tidy Chief Executive, said: “This research makes for shocking reading but it is not simply about knocking businesses for inaction – it is about understanding the barriers they face and looking to work with them to offer the expertise, support and guidance that will help them transform for good.
“Keep Britain Tidy is a charity that is focused on developing solutions and, through these solutions, helping businesses tackle the problems of waste, including single-use plastic.
“The public are willing to get out there and do something to clean up the plastic that they see around them – more than half a million volunteers gave their time during the Great British Spring Clean to do just that – and businesses must support the public by playing their part. There are some 5.7 million small and medium-sized businesses in the UK, accounting for 99% of all businesses – so we need them to take action alongside the household names.”
These figures have been published ahead of a wider study by Keep Britain Tidy’s Centre for Social Innovation and BRITA UK, The Role of Businesses in Reducing Single-Use Plastics. The study will include interviews with major companies such as Greggs and British Telecoms that suggest that larger businesses recognise the responsibility they have as a business and are taking action to reduce their use of single-use plastic ahead of legislation. However, the country’s 5.7 million small and medium-sized businesses[1] – accounting for 99% of all private businesses in Britain – have not kept up. The report will also include recommendations based on the successful initiatives introduced by larger businesses to help others make changes to reduce single-use plastic within their own organisations.
[1] Business statistics, House of Commons Library, https://researchbriefings.files.parliament.uk/documents/SN06152/SN06152.pdf