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Hong Kong supermarket selling strawberries individually wrapped for HK$168 as pressure grows to reduce packaging

It’s like something out of Mad Max, says campaigner against excessive use of plastic wrapping for fruit and vegetables, as petition against the practice circulates

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Wasteful: a solitary strawberry from Japan is packaged in plastic for sale at City'super in Causeway Bay.
Kylie Knott

A Hong Kong supermarket is selling individually wrapped strawberries at a time when a petition is circulating calling on supermarkets to reduce the use of plastic.

With a tag “Fresh by Air From Japan”, one premium Kotoka strawberry is being sold in a straw nest in a plastic-covered paper box with a Styrofoam “sock” for a staggering HK$168 at City'super in Causeway Bay.

This month a Change.org petition was launched, calling on Hong Kong supermarkets to stop the excessive use of plastic.
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Fruit and vegetable Styrofoam “socks” are among trash now washing up on Hong Kong beaches, some of which have been badly affected by a tidal wave of waste recently (above). Photo: Kylie Knott
Fruit and vegetable Styrofoam “socks” are among trash now washing up on Hong Kong beaches, some of which have been badly affected by a tidal wave of waste recently (above). Photo: Kylie Knott

Petition organiser Lisa Odell, founder of Plastic-Free HK, a retailer that sells sustainably designed products, says the use of plastic in supermarkets is “unnecessary and excessive”. The petition has more than 7,000 supporters and aims to get 100,000 signatures. “We have translated the petition into Chinese to reach a wider audience,” Odell said.

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Doug Woodring, co-founder of Ocean Recovery Alliance, says the Styrofoam “socks” used to wrap fruit and vegetables are being found all over Hong Kong beaches.

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