The
action at its restaurants across Britain will save an estimated
320 tonnes of single use plastic every year, the fast food giant
said.
Larger rival McDonald's Corp <MCD.N> announced on Wednesday that
some of its restaurants in Britain and Ireland would allow
customers to swap toys in happy meals for a fruit bag from next
month and that it planned to introduce books as an option from
early next year.
Burger King said it had been galvanized by Southampton sisters
Ella and Caitlin McEwan's Change.org petition https://www.change.org/p/burger-king-mcd-s-save-the-environment-stop-giving-plastic-toys-with-fast-food-kids-meals
calling on Burger King and McDonald's to stop giving plastic
toys with their kids' meals for the sake of the environment.
The chief executive of Burger King UK, Alasdair Murdoch, said
the plastic toy initiative was one strand of a wider strategy to
reduce packaging.
"What we are really focused on is removing single-use plastics,
and that's why we've done that with the toys," Murdoch said.
Burger King, a unit of Canada's Restaurant Brands International
<QSR.TO>, said on Thursday it was also installing amnesty bins
at its UK stores that would accept donations of plastic toys
that are given away free by either competitors, magazines or in
cereal boxes.
These items would then be given a "new purpose" and transformed
into play areas for selected stores and special trays
encouraging play across restaurants.
McDonald's sells 3.2 million happy meals per day, data from
research firm Sense360 showed, and comes as the world's largest
restaurant chain rolls out paper straws, removes plastic lids on
its McFlurry drinks and eliminates single-use plastic from its
salads. (https://bit.ly/2koLu9d)
(Reporting by Siddharth Cavale in Bengaluru; Editing by Raissa
Kasolowsky)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|
|