Sainsbury's slimline toilet roll to wipe 140 tonnes from carbon emissions

Authored by theguardian.com and submitted by JLowU571

With each Briton getting through an average of 50 toilet rolls a year, the carbon footprint created by supplying it is huge.

Makers including Andrex have made rolls last longer by increasing sheet numbers. But Sainsbury's is set to try something new: shrinking the inner tube.

The move, believed to be a UK first, should avoid 500 annual lorry trips from suppliers to stores. And the supermarket insists customers will not struggle to squeeze the new roll on to holders.

"We wanted to shrink the tube as much as possible and this was as far as we could go to guarantee that it will still fit customers' toilet roll holders," Kate Tucker of Sainsbury's said.

While the supermarket's own brand toilet roll has been made from certified sustainable Forest Stewardship Council sources for years – with the tube FSC-certified since last year – the smaller tube is expected to save 140 tonnes of CO2 annually in reduced transport and materials.

The diameter of the roll will fall from 123mm to 112mm, with the number of sheets still 240. Tucker added: "We believe this is a very significant move and we say to shoppers that they will get the same amount of toilet paper but with a smaller tube and therefore less packaging – including the outside film."

The new rolls will be on sale in May at the same price as before – £1.99 for four. White (admittedly bleached) is by far the most popular colour with shoppers, Tucker said, now that avocado and tangerine bathroom suites are out of vogue.

New imagery and text on the packs will explain to shoppers that there are the same number of sheets, and the same quality, but less packaging – taking lorries off the road and saving buyers space at home.

Tucker added: "Toilet paper is a huge-selling line as it something everyone has to buy and we estimate that most people use between 45 and 50 rolls a year. Perhaps it's hard to believe that centuries ago we used leaves and wool and that two-ply [the strengthened paper now commonly used] was only introduced in the 1960s. This is another step in its development, giving an essential household product a lower carbon footprint."

The move is part of Sainsbury's 20 by 20 sustainability plan, trying to shift customers' everyday behaviour to make a positive difference throughout its supply chain.

Bob Gordon, the British Retail Consortium's head of environment, said: "Many major brands and retailers are introducing great innovations to reduce the environmental impact of everyday goods and services. What may look like a minor change to a consumer makes a significant difference when scaled up across many thousands of products."

spoonfed on September 18th, 2017 at 11:23 UTC »

They've stopped doing this now. The inner cardboard tube has returned to its original diameter and the rolls now only have 220 sheets. There also used to be 18 rolls in the large pack, now it's only 16.

*Description

Now even softer 16 rolls, 2 ply 220 sheets per roll Sheet size 124mm x 105mm Average roll length 27.28m Total area 45.83 sq. metres Origin Produced in the UK Storage Store in a dry place.*

I've measured the old one at...

127mm x 111mm, 30.4m roll length. So the 18 roll pack used to be 60.9 sq. metres, 16 rolls were an equivalent 54.13 sq. metres.

The standard price has now changed though, it was 10.91971p per square metre, it's now 10.90988p

edit

More numbers...

The original weight of usable paper per roll was 140 grams (144g total less 4g core). New rolls are 120 grams (126g - 6g core). That gives a density of 41.48 grams per square metre for the original and 41.98 grams per square metre for the new ones. So they're not selling us more air. Which is nice.

Each old roll occupies 1.426 litres of volume, each new one occupies 1.256 litres. Now it's starting to add up.....

In the UK a 26,000kg (load capacity) HGV truck can take 26 pallets that are 1.2m x 1m x 2.2m. So old (skinny) rolls you could fit 39,520 rolls at a net weight of 5,700kg. New (return to fat) rolls you can fit 46,800 at 5,909kg.

So by removing 20 sheets per roll they've managed to increase quantity capacity by over 18% and weight capacity by 3.5% in a single truck. We'd notice the much smaller roll if they kept the thinner core so they've hoped by enlarging the core it wouldn't be so obvious.

Finally, where a full truck load was 455 years worth of toilet tissue for 1 person (57 sheets per day average use) they've managed to now get 494 years worth of paper on a truck!! 8.5% more. Or figuring a UK population of 65 million folk, if they all used sainsbury's super soft toilet tissue, we've got another 31 trucks a day off the road (394 - 363, 7.8% of the fleet)

artistansas on September 18th, 2017 at 08:23 UTC »

If everyone just pooped less, we could save more trees in this process too!

J4CKR4BB1TSL1MS on September 18th, 2017 at 06:51 UTC »

The diameter of the roll will fall from 123mm to 112mm, with the number of sheets still 240. Tucker added: "We believe this is a very significant move and we say to shoppers that they will get the same amount of toilet paper but with a smaller tube and therefore less packaging – including the outside film."

The new rolls will be on sale in May at the same price as before – £1.99 for four.

Seems like an all-round great move