Zero Waste Grocery Shopping

Follow these expert tips to have a better shopping experience for yourself and the environment.

 

When Lauren Singer goes food shopping, the people behind the counter already know she’s the one who’s going to insist on using her own reusable containers.

“They know me now,” says Lauren. “When I go to buy things now they already know that I don’t want packaging. It’s just a nice relationship to have.” It’s a win-win when you can develop a relationship with people you buy groceries from, while improving your relationship with the Earth, and advocating for zero waste practices.

Lauren Singer has made her name as the Zero Waste guru of Trash is for Tossers, a blog, lifestyle website, and online how-to guide for seekers of sustainable living. Lauren was an environmental studies major in college, and was compelled to try to live a Zero-Waste life when her professor, Jeffrey Hollender, founder of Seventh Generation, encouraged his students to “live their values.”

There’s unnecessary trash all around us in our everyday live. The road to a zero-waste life wasn’t always easy, but Lauren made it work. Which just goes to show, going zero-waste is not as impossible as it sounds. One of the easiest ways to reduce your personal waste is at the grocery store. We sat down with Lauren to figure out how to go grocery shopping waste-free.

Where to Shop

Lauren was never really a fan of typical grocery stores, so seeking out new places to get her produce was a win-win. “I love farmers markets. They just make me happier,” she explains. “I’m a big believer in doing things that make me feel good, and grocery stores just never made me feel good.” By shopping at local markets Lauren supports area farmers, gets fresh, quality produce, and—since most things at farmers markets aren’t prepackaged—she can more easily shop zero waste.

“First, before anything else, see if you have any local farmers markets or natural food stores. I believe in always trying to support your local economy. Big box stores should be a last resort,” she says.

Of course, for some, farmers markets and natural food stores may not be easily accessible, if accessible at all. While you may wish you could avoid them altogether, local grocery stores and big box stores could be your only option. We can all only do what we can. Make an effort to stop at farmers markets on the weekends if possible, and just remember that every little bit counts.

Regardless of your situation, there’s plenty you can do when shopping to help you transition into a less wasteful way of life without jumping too far outside your comfort zone.

What to Bring

An easy way to cut down on waste when grocery shopping is to BYOC—bring your own containers! If you have a ton of bags at home—which you more than likely do—Lauren suggests taking them to a local grocery store that has a plastic bag take-back bin (if you can’t find one, inquire with a store manager).

Unsure if you can make an impact? According to the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) the average consumer in England now buys just 10 bags a year from the main supermarket retailers, down from 140 bags in 2014.  It doesn’t stop with bags. Reusable containers are key for produce. Can you use your own mason jars or bags to collect products such as peanut butter, granola, or nuts? Bring your own cloth bags for lettuce and loose vegetables.

Next up? A shopping list. “When you make a shopping list you’ll know how many bags you will need. Usually, when you don’t make a shopping list you wind up getting stuff that you don’t need, and that’s typically wasteful,” Lauren says. Plan ahead and be prepared.

Photo courtesy of Trash Is For Tossers
Photo courtesy of Trash Is For Tossers

Product Tips

With your grocery list, reusable bags, and containers in tow, you’re ready to hit the aisles. “They say in a supermarket you should shop the perimeter,” Lauren advises, “that’s [where] things like the produce, eggs, milk, those kinds of things [are stored]. I completely avoid the processed food section.”

Here’s Lauren’s quick list when it comes to what to look for in products you purchase:

  • Look for recyclable packaging—always avoid plastic.
  • Opt for paper packaging first.
  • Cardboard packaging is a good secondary option to paper that is both sustainable, and compostable.
  • Choose products packaged in recyclable materials—aluminum cans, or glass.

Lauren also suggests buying products in larger quantities. Not only will they last longer, but products in larger quantities—like olive oil, for instance—are often found to be in more sustainable packaging, like glass bottles, rather than flexible plastic.

Of course it’s ideal if you can buy products from bins using your own reusable containers and skipping packaging altogether. But these options aren’t always available for all products—or at all, depending on where you live. So at least there are some simple, mindful tweaks you can make to your grocery shopping routine to be kinder to the Earth.

Speak Up and Build Relationships

“There are always options, you just have to ask for what you want,” Lauren says. “We’re the ones spending money… Which is important to remember. We’re the ones giving these stores our business. They should be accommodating to us. We forget that, we think, ‘Oh, well, a store is not going to change for me.’ ”

Grocery shopping zero waste offers you an opportunity to use your voice, spread the word, and build relationships with others. In most supermarkets and big box stores, asking for produce sans packaging may be an unusual request. “It’s all about relationships,” Lauren says, “give a little backstory, explain to people why you’re doing what you’re doing.” It can make a difference, and that impact could have a ripple effect.

If you’re heading to an in-store bakery or butcher with your own container in hand, be ready to speak up. Offer your container with an explanation, something like: “I’m trying really hard to not make any trash, I know this might be weird, but I would really appreciate it if you could try to use my container for this meat—or cheese, bread, etc.—instead of wrapping it in plastic,” Lauren suggests. When you share your story you’re opening other’s eyes to options they may not have been aware of, while also building relationships.

What to Avoid

Styrofoam, single-use disposables (like straws), paper towels, napkins, produce stickers, and flexible plastic packaging are all at the top of Lauren’s list of things to avoid when grocery shopping. Store-bought products that you can easily make yourself are on this list as well (items like cleaning products, laundry detergent, toothpaste, and deodorant, to name a few).

When it comes to shopping and living zero waste, Lauren believes it’s important to evaluate what you need versus what you want. Assess your life. Lauren explains: “Ask yourself, ‘Do I need these things?’ ”

We live in a wasteful world. The average household in the UK produces more than a tonne of waste every year. Put together, this comes to a total of 31 million tonnes per year, equivalent to the weight of three and a half million double-decker buses, a queue of which would go around the world two and a half times. Imagine how different things would be—how much less literal junk we’d be living with—if every person made a commitment to shrink this. Having found a good formula for Zero Waste living, all the trash Lauren now generates in a full year will fit into a single mason jar.

Lauren has allowed herself to become aware of, and very familiar with, the trash she produces by keeping her trash in a mason jar. Things that you wouldn’t ordinarily take much notice of suddenly come into the spotlight when your trash is on display. Take produce stickers, for instance. “How often do you think of produce stickers?” Lauren asks. “Never.” But when you’re keeping tabs on your trash, you’re much more likely to identify the little things you’d otherwise miss. “I do like collecting [in the trash jar], because I think it just sheds light on a problem, and then you’re more likely to effectively solve it,” she says.

Imagine if every person made a commitment to make virtually no trash every year. What would it do for our resources? What would the ocean look like? How could we change our planet? The more we learn about our environment, and what we can do to protect it, the less excuses we have to continue to harm it.

Disposing of waste responsibly at Wanderlust O'ahu
Disposing of waste responsibly at Wanderlust O’ahu

Have you tried zero waste grocery shopping? How did it go? Share in the comments below.

Maggie Peikon bio2Maggie Peikon is a New York native, writer, and sufferer of insatiable wanderlust. An avid endorphin seeker she has a constant need to be moving, seeking adventure in all she does. She is a lover of travel, daydreaming, fitness, thunderstorms, and her dog, Finley. Despite the fact that she has to take medication daily due to a thyroidectomy, Maggie still believes that laughter will always be the best medicine. Follow her musings on Instagram and Twitter.

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