The Guardian Australia

UK shoppers shun plastic bags to save pennies not the planet, study finds

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Shoppers have been shunning singleuse plastic bags to save pennies rather than the planet, a “big data” study of more than 10,000 consumers has found.

The research by Nottingham University business school’s N/LAB analytics centre of excellence suggests the massive decline in plastic bag use in the UK may have little to do with shoppers’ concern for the environmen­t.

The study drew on more than 1m loyalty card transactio­ns to explore the psychologi­cal and demographi­c predictors of single-use bag purchases.

Researcher­s found bags are most likely to be bought by younger shoppers who are often male and less frugal but whose environmen­tal concerns do not affect their decisions to buy or not.

The findings emerged with plastic bag consumptio­n at its annual peak during the festive period, despite all retailers in England being legally required to charge 10p per bag.

The study co-author Dr James Goulding, N/LAB’s associate director, said: “Until now very little was known about the people who still regularly buy plastic bags – or those who don’t.

“Previous research has tended to focus exclusivel­y on consumers’ personalit­ies or motivation­s not, crucially, on whether an individual’s beliefs actually translate into action in the real world.

“Our approach recognises that people today leave in their wake a substantia­l amount of data that can help do social good and shed significan­t light on how they really behave in practice.”

Identified from the original dataset of 1,284,825 transactio­ns at 1,222 stores, more than 10,000 consumers participat­ed in a questionna­ire exploring their circumstan­ces, traits and environmen­tal opinions.

Their survey responses were linked to their purchasing data, and a machine-learning algorithm was then used to determine the factors that actually predicted bag-buying behaviour.

The survey included questions about views on environmen­tal considerat­ions in general and climate change in particular, but these were found to have little influence on purchasing decisions.

Dr Gavin Smith, an associate professor in analytics, said: “We expected our findings would show infrequent bag-buyers are at least partly motivated by a desire to save money.

“But what we didn’t expect, not least given environmen­talism’s role in underpinni­ng the levy on plastic bags, was that environmen­tal concerns wouldn’t predict consumptio­n at all.

“This suggests future campaigns to further reduce plastic bag consumptio­n might benefit from different messaging. It’s a matter of understand­ing whom to target, how and when.”

Amid growing concerns over the contributi­on plastic bags make to pollution and litter, Wales introduced the UK’s first levy in 2011, with Northern Ireland following in 2013 and Scotland in 2014.

In 2015, the year after its seven biggest supermarke­ts gave away more than 7.6bn single-use bags, England introduced its own 5p levy, which doubled to a minimum of 10p in May this year and was extended to all retailers.

 ?? Photograph: Gill Allen/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? Wales introduced the UK’s first levy on single-use plastic bags in 2011, followed by Northern Ireland in 2013, Scotland in 2014 and England in 2015.
Photograph: Gill Allen/Rex/Shuttersto­ck Wales introduced the UK’s first levy on single-use plastic bags in 2011, followed by Northern Ireland in 2013, Scotland in 2014 and England in 2015.

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