Shopping: delivery vs shop in person
Posted: Fri Nov 03, 2006 10:47 am
A neighbour has just told me that he'd heard on the radio that having your groceries home-delivered was more eco-friendly than buying in person.
Leaving aside the dreaded shopping at supermarkets issue, has anyone come across any figures that support this.
At first glance, it makes sense - if for example, all five households here had their groceries delivered at a co-ordinated time it would mean one trip instead of five. Of course, the reality is rather different (although I'm still trying to persuade them to buy veg from me rather than the supermarket which would be even better again).
It also has implications for our pork and lamb - it may well be better for me to do one long, circular trip and drop the meat off than have people collect it. Of course, that would take a big chunk out of a day and I'd have to charge more to make up for both that loss of time as well as the fuel.
So, has anyone found any figures on home delivery vs shopping in person?
Leaving aside the dreaded shopping at supermarkets issue, has anyone come across any figures that support this.
At first glance, it makes sense - if for example, all five households here had their groceries delivered at a co-ordinated time it would mean one trip instead of five. Of course, the reality is rather different (although I'm still trying to persuade them to buy veg from me rather than the supermarket which would be even better again).
It also has implications for our pork and lamb - it may well be better for me to do one long, circular trip and drop the meat off than have people collect it. Of course, that would take a big chunk out of a day and I'd have to charge more to make up for both that loss of time as well as the fuel.
So, has anyone found any figures on home delivery vs shopping in person?