Most Black Friday purchases soon end up as waste – University of Leeds

The retail bonanza set to begin today, Black Friday, is expected to see more than half of shoppers buying electronic goods and almost a third purchasing clothes.

But a new report says that up to 80 per cent of items and any plastic packaging they are wrapped in will end up either in landfill, incineration or at best low quality recycling, often after a very short life.

Most of the resources they are made from will only get one use before being wasted.

A new report, Building a Circular Economy, was produced by charity and independent think tank Green Alliance as part of a partnership with the Resource Recovery from Waste programme, based at Leeds School of Civil Engineering.

The report, based on research by Professor Phil Purnell, Professor of Materials and Structures, and Research Impact Fellow in Circular Economy Dr Anne Velenturf, finds:

A circular economic system where long-lasting repairable products are the norm and resources are maintained, reused or recycled back into high quality uses is the way to avoid such unnecessary waste.

It would also avoid the environmental damage caused by such resource wastage, from initial raw material extraction to end-of-life problems such as marine plastic pollution.

The countrys current system is not set up to be circular, despite recent promises in the governments resources and waste strategy to preserve our stock of material resources by minimising waste, promoting resource efficiency and moving towards a circular economy.

A circular system would involve better design, logistics and infrastructure for repair and reuse, a National Materials Datahub to map resource stocks and flows, and business models to help reduce unnecessary consumption.

Libby Peake, senior policy adviser on resources at Green Alliance, said: Black Fridays could look very different in the future.

They wouldnt need to be followed by buyers remorse shortly after as low quality products are ditched. The next government needs to kick-start a resource revolution and change the system, starting with the infrastructure that enables a circular economy to thrive.

Its not just good for the environment. People want high quality, long lasting, repairable goods.

Professor Purnell, who convenes the Resource Recovery from Waste programme, added: Theres plenty of support for the idea of a circular economy, including from government departments and big high street names such as Apple and IKEA.

However, by failing to invest in the right infrastructure that supports reduced resource use, we are perpetuating the linear economy. We urgently need to change focus.

A high value circular economy could generate billions of pounds for the economy, deliver half a million clean green jobs, and be a huge opportunity to reduce carbon emissions.

Further information

For interviews, contact pressoffice@leeds.ac.uk or +44(0)113 343 4031.

Resource Recovery from Waste is a collaborative research programme engaging academia, industry, government and the general public to develop knowledge and tools to reduce pressure on natural resources and create value from wastes. It has delivered environmental science that has supported radical change in waste and resource management. https://rrfw.org.uk

Green Alliance is a charity and independent think tank, focused on ambitious leadership for the environment. With a track record of 40 years, Green Alliance has worked with the most influential leaders from the NGO, business, academic and political communities. Our work generates new thinking and dialogue, and has increased political action and support for environmental solutions in the UK.www.green-alliance.org.uk

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Most Black Friday purchases soon end up as waste - University of Leeds

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