The agreement gives flexibility to allow individual retailers to respond to the agreement in ways that are best suited to their customers and type of trading, and recognises that a number are already addressing this issue through a variety of approaches.
Retailers will be reducing the environmental impact of bags by:
* encouraging customers to reduce significantly the number of carrier bags they use;
* reducing the impact of each carrier bag (e.g. by using less material or incorporating recycled content); and
* enabling the recycling of more carrier bags where appropriate. There will also be further work to encourage carrier bag re-use.
Commenting, Local Environment Minister Ben Bradshaw said:
"This is an ambitious but very practical agreement and we are pleased that the retailers have agreed to work with us and UK consumers in such a positive way.
"Consumers are increasingly aware that they can make positive choices to help the environment in the way they shop. By signing up to this statement, the UK's retailers have also committed to help their customers to reduce, reuse and recycle their carrier bags."
If achieved, the 25% reduction target could reduce carbon dioxide emissions by up to 58,500 tonnes a year - equivalent to taking 18,000 cars off the road for a year. It is another example of the simple practical measures that can be taken to help tackle climate change.
Nigel Smith, British Retail Consortium Director of Environmental Policy said: "Retailers are already rewarding re-use, promoting 'bags for life', using and developing alternative materials and trialling bigger bags that carry more shopping. They want to take that further.
"Twenty-five per cent is an ambitious target for the industry as a whole. It will require the Government's support in encouraging customers to reduce, re- use, recycle and take an improved approach to household waste management."
Each signatory is now working with WRAP to identify a baseline figure
against which the reduction in environmental impact can be measured and reported. Progress will be monitored jointly by the retailer signatories, government and WRAP and a review will be completed before the end of 2008 to see what would be required to make further reductions by 2010.
WRAP director Phillip Ward, explained: "This initiative builds on WRAP's
broader work with the retail sector to reduce packaging waste. Where there is genuine commitment, flexible voluntary arrangements like this can be successful in bringing change."