Pieter Pot wants to make a dent in that with its packaging-free online supermarket, a concept with great consumer potential considering 60% of people want supermarkets to be the ones to take responsibility for reducing plastic packaging. Comprehensive LCAs prove that Pieter Pot’s glass jar delivery system has a lower impact than plastic, but it comes at a price, and in the midst of rising living costs that could hamper progress.
In measuring its carbon footprint, Pieter Pot discovered some plastic options emitted less CO2 that its chosen glass jar, and funnelled some of its latest funding into innovating a new jar design to compete. Shape, weight, material and transit all count when it comes to a pack’s carbon footprint. For example, if a round bottle is made rectangular instead, more bottles can be packed in one box, meaning a shipment requires fewer boxes, fewer shipping containers and fewer vehicles overall, reducing a product’s footprint by default. Don’t assume a material swap will be enough.
Pieter Pot leads with sustainability, therefore, its higher prices might seem like a green tax to those consumers not engaged with the narrative. Target a wider audience by communicating the convenience of at-home collections and a choice of delivery slots, while appealing to a newfound focus on health and wellbeing with messaging focused on the availability of natural, organic and vegan products. This will help align the platform more closely with other food delivery services on the market, and demonstrate that people don’t have to radically change their behaviour to engage.
Pieter Pot is in talks with Unilever and PepsiCo to deliver their products through the Pieter Pot platform. It is also working with Heinz to make the company’s supply chain more circular. The internal circular systems you develop with a refillable grocery platform could be the key to scaling through collaboration.