Brits bin 7,000 single-use items a year

Rosie Greenaway
3 Min Read

A new nationwide study from reusable baby wipe brand Cheeky Wipes reveals the vast quantity of single-use waste generated by British consumers – and wipes, tea bags and nappies are topping the charts.

With more than 7,000 single-use items hitting Britain’s landfill sites every year, Cheeky Wipes reports that the average citizen annually throws away the following:

  • 3,796 baby wipes and 1,352 nappies (in parents with a child under two years old)
  • 1,560 tea bags
  • 795 paper towels
  • 689 food packaging items
  • 416 drinks cans
  • 416 antibacterial wipes
  • 364 face wipes
  • 364 drinks bottles
  • 312 disposable face masks
  • 312 bin liners
  • 312 cotton wipes
  • 264 cotton buds
  • 208 sheets of silver foil
  • 156 coffee cups
  • 156 condoms
  • 156 plastic straws
  • 84 period products
  • 52 disposable razors
  • 52 shampoo bottles
  • 52 shower gel bottles
  • 52 takeaway boxes/cutlery
  • 26 washing up gloves

Amounting to approximately 7,000 single-use items per consumer, per year, this staggering figure equates to almost five billion items being disposed of as domestic waste.

Despite 85% saying they are trying to live more eco-consciously, 44% of those polled admitted to being ‘addicted’ to certain single-use items because of convenience, while 25% said they are swayed by ‘the lower cost compared to reusable alternatives’.

The more encouraging figure of 53% who claim to ‘try their level best to avoid buying single-use items’ is counteracted by the 63% who admit to having binned recyclable items rather than going through proper channels to dispose of them.

Of the parents polled, 57% confessed that having a new baby threw them off-course and their ‘green intentions’ fell by the wayside. This translated as 25% stopping recycling after becoming parents; 26% deviating off their plan to use reusable nappies (64% consider disposable nappies an essential ‘baby bag’ item when out and about); and 29% resorting to single-use wipes to keep their babies clean (71% of new parents wouldn’t leave home without this convenience item).

But the data also indicates this single-use behaviour is weighing on the conscience of the majority of Brits: 84% said if they had the opportunity to buy easy-to-use eco nappies and wipes they would take it; 83% have expressed feelings of ‘guilt’ over accidentally or deliberately throwing non-biodegradable wipes down the toilet; and 40% of respondents have been ‘ticked off’ at their partners for purchasing single-use items.

The study was conducted by Perspectus Global, using a sample of 1,500 British residents.  

 

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Having spent the early part of career putting her BA (Hons) in Media Writing to use as a freelancer writer across a number of industries – from wellbeing, food and travel to design and events – Rosie Greenaway’s post as editor of Natural Products News and Natural Beauty News began in 2017. In 2018 she co-launched NPN’s 30 under 30 initiative, is a regular presenter and speaker on industry panels, is a judge of several awards schemes in food and beauty (from the Soil Association’s BOOM Awards to the Who’s Who in Green Beauty Scandinavia) and acts as an Advisory Board Member for the Sustainable Beauty Coalition.
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