KEY POINTS
  • Walmart is testing reusable tote bags as part of its direct-to-fridge delivery service, InHome, which is expanding across the country.
  • The pilot project is part of a broader effort by the retail giant to deliver on a pledge to move toward reusable, recyclable or industrially compostable packaging and reach zero waste in its own operations in the U.S. and Canada by 2025.
  • Other companies, including Estee Lauder, New Balance and Rent the Runway, are also looking for ways to move to a circular system of reusable packaging.

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Walmart is trying to reduce its reliance on single-use plastic bags. It has a pilot program through its subscription grocery service, InHome.

When Walmart rolled out a new grocery delivery service, it tested a bold premise: customers letting a stranger walk into their homes to deliver milk, eggs and other products directly into the fridge.

Now that expanding service, InHome, is testing whether the country's largest grocer and its shoppers can phase out reliance on single-use plastic bags and other kinds of disposable packaging that wind up in shoppers' homes — and ultimately, the landfill.

In this article