Tag Archives: hunts

Helen Hunt’s ‘Twister 2’ Got Rejected by the Studio for ‘Potentially Shady’ Reasons, Says Co-Writer Daveed Diggs – Variety

  1. Helen Hunt’s ‘Twister 2’ Got Rejected by the Studio for ‘Potentially Shady’ Reasons, Says Co-Writer Daveed Diggs Variety
  2. Universal killed Daveed Diggs’ Twister 2 for “shady” reasons The A.V. Club
  3. Daveed Diggs says Helen Hunt’s ‘Twister’ sequel wasn’t made for ‘shady’ reasons Entertainment Weekly News
  4. Daveed Diggs Says Helen Hunt’s ‘Twister’ Sequel Idea Was Scrapped for ‘Potentially Shady’ Reasons PEOPLE
  5. Daveed Diggs Says ‘Twister’ Sequel Wasn’t Made Due to ‘Shady’ Reasons Insider
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Keira Knightley hunts an infamous serial killer in the trailer for new thriller The Boston Strangler – Daily Mail

  1. Keira Knightley hunts an infamous serial killer in the trailer for new thriller The Boston Strangler Daily Mail
  2. Keira Knightley Tries to Break the Story of the Boston Strangler in Trailer for Real-Life Thriller PEOPLE
  3. ‘Boston Strangler’ Trailer: Keira Knightley and Carrie Coon Investigate a ’60s Serial Killer IndieWire
  4. ‘Boston Strangler’ Trailer: Keira Knightley Leads 20th’s True-Crime Thriller For Hulu Deadline
  5. 60 years later, ‘The Boston Strangler’ podcast revisits the murders ABC News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Autumn Statement live updates: What to look for in Jeremy Hunt’s fiscal plan

UK chancellor Jeremy Hunt’s Autumn Statement will be the government’s first fiscal announcement under Rishi Sunak’s premiership.

Hunt, chancellor since October 14, has scrapped almost all the measures outlined by his predecessor Kwasi Kwarteng, who was sacked after 38 days in the job.

The past 12 months have seen several budgetary announcements under three prime ministers and four chancellors:

Autumn 2021

Prime minister: Boris Johnson; chancellor Rishi Sunak

Sunak introduced his third Budget as a gateway towards a post-Covid economy. He pledged to pump more money into public services to help a post-pandemic recovery. His statement outlined plans to raise taxes to their highest in more than 70 years, including a rise in corporation tax.

March 2022

Prime minister: Boris Johnson; chancellor Rishi Sunak

Rishi Sunak unveiled tax-cutting measures in his Spring Statement, his last as chancellor, which was delivered against a backdrop of rising inflation in the month that followed Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Sunak maintained a planned 1.25 percentage-point rise in national insurance contributions but increased the minimum threshold by £3,000. He aimed to cut the basic rate of income tax by 1 percentage point to 19 per cent in 2024 and proposed to cut fuel duty by 5p a litre.

September 23

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Kwasi Kwarteng

Kwasi Kwarteng revealed the biggest tax cuts for 50 years in his fiscal statement, hailing his £45bn debt-financed “mini” Budget as the beginning of a “new era” of economic growth.

Kwarteng proposed ending the 45p additional income tax rate for the highest earners, reducing the basic rate from 20p in the pound to 19p, lowering stamp duty, national insurance and taxes on dividends, and instituting a levy on house purchases.

He planned to scrap a proposed corporate tax rise and keep it at 19 per cent while maintaining the 8 per cent charge on bank profits, which had been set to be reduced next year.

But markets went into a tailspin after the announcement, and sterling tumbled to a record low against the dollar. Borrowing costs surged and pension funds came under pressure. The Bank of England intervened.

The fiscal announcement led to his downfall — he was soon sacked as chancellor — and Liz Truss followed by quitting as prime minister. Her tenure had lasted 45 days.

September 28

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Kwasi Kwarteng

The Bank of England launched a £65bn emergency government bond-buying programme to stem a debt crisis and protect pension funds threatened by insolvency after gilt yields soared.

The central bank warned of a “material risk to UK financial stability” from turmoil in the gilts market.

October 17

Prime minister: Liz Truss; chancellor: Jeremy Hunt

Three days into his chancellorship, Hunt ripped up two-thirds of Kwarteng’s “mini” Budget measures and warned of “eye-wateringly difficult” decisions. Truss had already axed tax cuts for big business and the wealthy.

Hunt scrapped a £6bn cut in the basic rate of income tax, along with changes to dividend taxes, a VAT tax break for foreign shoppers and a freeze on alcohol duty.

The chancellor curtailed Truss’s scheme to cap British households’ annual energy bills at £2,500 on average for two years, saying it would end after six months.

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The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt’s Next-Gen Update Arrives This December

CD Projekt Red has announced that the PlayStation 5, Xbox Series, and PC next-gen update for The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt will be released on December 14.

Announced in a post on The Witcher’s official Twitter account (below), CD Projekt Red has stuck to its promise of a fourth quarter release by confirming the December date. This only applies to the digital version of the game though, with CD Projekt Red saying that a physical release date will be announced later.

The upgrade, which is free to anyone who’s bought the game previously, includes “dozens of visual, performance, and technical enhancements over the original,” CD Projekt Red said in a press release. “These include ray tracing support, faster loading times on consoles, as well as a variety of mods integrated into the experience, among many others.”

More details on these integrated mods and other features will be shared during a Twitch livestream sometime next week, but CD Projekt Red has otherwise confirmed the next-gen version to include all previously released DLC alongside new content based on The Witcher Netflix series.

The game was originally expected to be released last year before being delayed twice, with third party studio Saber Interactive originally developing the new version. CD Projekt Red took over itself in April 2022, though persisted that the game was “not in development hell”.

The Q4 date was set back in May but many were still worried given the two previous delays, not to mention the impending end of the year, but CD Projekt Red will seemingly meet its target.

In our 9/10 review of the original release, IGN said: “Massive in size, and meticulously detailed, The Witcher 3 ends Geralt’s story on a high note,” and it also won our Game of the Year.

Every CD Projekt Red Game In Development

Ryan Dinsdale is an IGN freelancer. He’ll talk about The Witcher all day.



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Trump statement today: Ex-president pleads fifth amendment 440 times as Trumpworld hunts Mar-a-Lago raid informant

Eric Trump blames Biden administration after FBI raid on Mar-A-Lago

As the fallout from the FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago continues with rumours of a Trumpworld informant tipping off authorities, Mr Trump yesterday pleaded the fifth amendment 440 times in his sworn deposition to the long-running New York State probe into his real estate dealings.

Mr Trump has repeatedly condemned the investigation as a politically motivated “witch hunt”. His children Ivanka and Donald Jr both recently gave depositions in the civil investigation after months fighting subpoenas for their testimony.

Meanwhile, reports have revealed that the FBI’s raid on Mar-a-Lago may have been spurred by an informant at the resort tipping the bureau off that Mr Trump and his team had not handed over all the relevant documents stored at the ex-president’s Florida residence. It is not yet clear who the informant might be, but the Monday raid saw agents searching private areas including a bedroom.

The former president and some members of his legal team have claimed without providing proof that agents may have planted evidence at his home.

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Swalwell: Blame Trump for FBI raid firestorm

Democratic Congressman Eric Swalwell, who for assorted reasons has become a focal point for right-wing outrage (including graphic death threats targeting him and his family), has been speaking out loudly against Donald Trump ever since the Mar-a-Lago raid came to light. And in the face of hysteria on the right about the FBI’s supposed attempt to smear Mr Trump, he has this corrective:

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Trump retains celebrity lawyer for Georgia investigation

Facing a grand jury probe in Fulton County, Georgia, where authorities are investigating his efforts to pressure state officials into overturning Joe Biden’s victory, Donald Trump is lawyering up – and true to a pattern set over his decades moving in glitzy circles, his choice of lawyer comes from the world of celebrity rather than the world of politics.

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“Who went rogue?” Fox Host pushes back on GOP talking points

Multiple Fox News hosts have this week helped spread both unsubstantiated claims about the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago raid and furious rhetoric directed at the agency itself, as well as at the Department of Justice and Attorney General Merrick Garland specifically.

However, not all hosts are on board – and when offered the chance to quiz House Minority Whip Steve Scalise this morning, Fox & Friends host Steve Doocy demanded to know why he was jumping to conclusions without evidence.

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DoJ must respond to request to unseal warrant – judge

The judge who signed the warrant granting the FBI permission to search Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago residence has instructed the Department of Justice to respond to a request to unseal it.

Judge Bruce Reinhart ordered on Wednesday that “on or before 5:00pm Eastern time on August 15, 2022, the Government shall file a Response to the Motion to Unseal. The response may be filed ex parte and under seal as necessary to avoid disclosing matters already under seal. In that event, the Government shall file a redacted Response in the public record.”

The decision does not guarantee that the warrant will be unsealed in its entirety, but does at least raise the possibility that it may be made public within a week despite Mr Trump’s reticence to share it.

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ICYMI: Trump accused of using QAnon song in video

Donald Trump’s recent campaign-style video that he posted to his social media platform Truth Social appears to feature a song titled after the slogan of the QAnon conspiracy theory.

The former president on 9 August posted the nearly four-minute-long video on Truth Social. According to an analysis from media watchdog Media Matters, the music used in Mr Trump’s video “is a song titled Wwg1wga, produced in 2020 by an artist using the name ‘Richard Feelgood’ on Spotify”.

The acronym “wwg1wga” is shorthand in the QAnon community for the slogan “Where we go one, we go all”.

Maroosha Muzaffar has more:

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Ex-Trump chief of staff says ex-president should release Mar-a-Lago warrant

Mick Mulvaney, who served as acting White House chief of staff in the later phase of the Trump administration, has told CNN that he thinks Donald Trump “probably should” go ahead and unseal the warrant for the FBI search at Mar-a-Lago on Monday.

Mr Mulvaney argued that the secrecy around major grand jury investigations is “real, it’s valid, it’s there for a reason” – but also diagnosed recent events as “beyond the ordinary course of business” and suggested that “everybody” involved in the case, involved Mr Trump, to be as transparent as possible.

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NYT sues to unseal Trump warrant

It is entirely within Donald Trump’s power to release the FBI’s warrant for its raid on Mar-a-Lago on Monday, but he has so far declined to do so for unspecified reasons. That leaves his critics, members of Congress and journalists to demand its release – or, in the case of the New York Times, to take legal action to secure access to it.

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Trump offers new narrative of FBI raid

In lieu of releasing the warrant that gave the FBI permission to raid Mar-a-Lago – as it is within his power to do – Donald Trump has been periodically issuing various claims about how the raid came about and what the agents who carried it out actually did.

Here’s his latest narrative of what happened, delivered last night on Truth Social.

(Truth Social)

The complaint that agents acted “without notification or warning” misses the point of a warrant to look for allegedly concealed material, a search that by definition requires law enforcement to act without notifying those suspected of concealing it. (Of course, Mr Trump might very well understand this.)

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Shouting match on Fox News over FBI raid

Fox News’s radicalisation has reached a new peak in the wake of Monday’s events at Mar-a-Lago, with hosts and guests propagating false and questionable narratives about the raid and calling for investigations of the federal law enforcement architecture simply because Mr Trump’s home was searched.

One of the network’s contributors, Jessica Tarlov, dared to go out on a limb on The Five last night – but when she called on her fellow commentators to stop projecting “mistruths and assumptions” that are also being shared by Mr Trump, she found herself in a shouting match with co-host Jeanine Pirro:

Sravasti Dasgupta reports.

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NY probe: Trump took the fifth more than 440 times

Former president Donald Trump on Wednesday declined to answer over 440 questions during a deposition with investigators working for New York Attorney General Letitia James’ office, instead choosing to invoke his fifth amendment right against self-incrimination each time.

According to multiple reports citing sources familiar with what happened during the Wednesday session, Mr Trump only answered one question — he provided his name when asked after he was sworn in as a witness.



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South Korea hunts tungsten treasure in race for rare minerals

  • S.Korean tungsten mine gets $100 million makeover
  • Dozens of new mineral projects launched globally
  • Green, digital booms fuel demand for rare minerals
  • China is pre-eminent in critical minerals supply
  • GRAPHIC-S.Korea’s reliance on China:

SANGDONG, South Korea, May 9 (Reuters) – Blue tungsten winking from the walls of abandoned mine shafts, in a town that’s seen better days, could be a catalyst for South Korea’s bid to break China’s dominance of critical minerals and stake its claim to the raw materials of the future.

The mine in Sangdong, 180 km southeast of Seoul, is being brought back from the dead to extract the rare metal that’s found fresh value in the digital age in technologies ranging from phones and chips to electric vehicles and missiles.

“Why reopen it now after 30 years? Because it means sovereignty over natural resources,” said Lee Dong-seob, vice president of mine owner Almonty Korea Tungsten Corp.

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“Resources have become weapons and strategic assets.”

Sangdong is one of at least 30 critical mineral mines or processing plants globally that have been launched or reopened outside China over the last four years, according to a Reuters review of projects announced by governments and companies. These include projects developing lithium in Australia, rare earths in the United States and tungsten in Britain.

The scale of the plans illustrates the pressure felt by countries across the world to secure supplies of critical minerals regarded as essential for the green energy transition, from lithium in EV batteries to magnesium in laptops and neodymium found in wind turbines.

Overall demand for such rare minerals is expected to increase four-fold by 2040, the International Energy Agency said last year. For those used in electric vehicles and battery storage, demand is projected to grow 30-fold, it added.

Many countries view their minerals drive as a matter of national security because China controls the mining, processing or refining of many of these resources.

The Asian powerhouse is the largest supplier of critical minerals to the United States and Europe, according to a study by the China Geological Survey in 2019. Of the 35 minerals the United States has classified as critical, China is the largest supplier of 13, including rare earth elements essential for clean-energy technologies, the study found. China is the largest source of 21 key minerals for the European Union, such as antimony used in batteries, it said.

“In the critical raw material restaurant, China is sitting eating its dessert, and the rest of the world is in the taxi reading the menu,” said Julian Kettle, senior vice president for metals and mining at consultancy Wood MacKenzie.

The stakes are particularly high for South Korea, home of major chipmakers like Samsung Electronics. The country is the world’s largest consumer of tungsten per capita and relies on China for 95% of its imports of the metal, which is prized for its unrivalled strength and its resistance to heat.

China controls over 80% of global tungsten supplies, according to CRU Group, London-based commodity analysts.

The mine at Sangdong, a once bustling town of 30,000 residents that’s now home to just 1,000, holds one of the world’s largest tungsten deposits and could produce 10% of global supply when it opens next year, according to its owner.

Lewis Black, CEO of Almonty Korea’s Canadian-based parent Almonty Industries, told Reuters that it planned to offer about half of the operation’s processed output to the domestic market in South Korea as an alternative to Chinese supply.

“It’s easy to buy from China and China is the largest trading partner of South Korea but they know they’re over-dependent,” Black said. “You have to have a plan B right now.”

Sangdong’s tungsten, discovered in 1916 during the Japanese colonial era, was once a backbone of the South Korean economy, accounting for 70% of the country’s export earnings in the 1960s when it was largely used in metal-cutting tools.

The mine was closed in 1994 due to cheaper supply of the mineral from China, which made it commercially unviable, but now Almonty is betting that demand, and prices will continue to rise driven by the digital and green revolutions as well as a growing desire by countries to diversify their supply sources.

European prices of 88.5% minimum paratungstate – the key raw material ingredient in tungsten products – are trading around $346 per tonne, up more than 25% from a year ago and close to their highest levels in five years, according to pricing agency Asian Metal.

The Sangdong mine is being modernised, with vast tunnels being dug underground, while work has also started on a tungsten crushing and grinding plant.

“We should keep running this kind of mine so that new technologies can be handed over to the next generations,” said Kang Dong-hoon, a manager in Sangdong, where a “Pride of Korea” sign is displayed on a wall of the mine office.

“We have been lost in the mining industry for 30 years. If we lose this chance, then there will be no more.”

Almonty Industries has signed a 15-year deal to sell tungsten to Pennsylvania-based Global Tungsten & Powders, a supplier to the U.S. military, which variously uses the metal in artillery shell tips, rockets and satellite antennae.

Yet there are no guarantees of long-term success for the mining group, which is investing about $100 million in the Sangdong project. Such ventures may still struggle to compete with China and there are concerns among some industry experts that developed countries will not follow through on commitments to diversify supply chains for critical minerals.

Seoul set up an Economic Security Key Items Taskforce after a supply crisis last November when Beijing tightened exports of urea solution, which many South Korean diesel vehicles are required by law to use to cut emissions. Nearly 97% of South Korea’s urea came from China at the time and shortages prompted panic-buying at filling stations across the country.

The Korean Mine Rehabilitation and Resources Corporation (KOMIR), a government agency responsible for national resource security, told Reuters it had committed to subsidise about 37% of Sangdong’s tunnelling costs and would consider further support to mitigate any potential environmental damage.

Incoming President Yoon Seok-yeol pledged in January to reduce mineral dependence on “a certain country”, and last month announced a new resource strategy that will allow the government to share stockpiling information with the private sector.

South Korea is not alone.

The United States, European Union and Japan have all launched or updated national critical mineral supply strategies over the last two years, laying out broad plans to invest in more diversified supply lines to reduce their reliance on China.

Mineral supply chains have also become a feature of diplomatic missions.

Last year, Canada and the European Union launched a strategic partnership on raw materials to reduce dependence on China, while South Korea recently signed collaboration deals with Australia and Indonesia on mineral supply chains.

“Supply-chain diplomacy will be prioritised by many governments in the coming years as accessing critical raw materials for the green and digital transition has become a top priority,” said Henning Gloystein, director of energy and climate resources at the Eurasia Group consultancy.

In November, China’s top economic planner said it would step up exploration of strategic mineral resources including rare earths, tungsten and copper.

Investment globally of $200 billion in additional mining and smelter capacity is needed to meet critical mineral supply demand by 2030, 10 times what is being committed currently, Kettle said.

Yet projects have faced resistance from communities who don’t want a mine or smelter near their homes.

In January, for example, pressure from environmentalists prompted Serbia to revoke Rio Tinto’s lithium exploration licence while U.S. President Joe Biden’s administration cancelled two leases for Antofagasta’s copper and nickel mines in Minnesota. read more

In Sangdong, some residents are doubtful that the mine will improve their lives.

“Many of us in this town didn’t believe the mine would really come back,” said Kim Kwang-gil, 75, who for decades lived off the tungsten he panned from a stream flowing down from the mine when it operated.

“The mine doesn’t need as many people as before, because everything is done by machines.”

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Reporting by Ju-min Park and Joe Brock; Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Gavin Maguire; Editing by Kevin Krolicki and Pravin Char

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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Sam Hunt’s Pregnant Wife Hannah Lee Fowler Files for Divorce: Reports

It’s over between Sam Hunt and wife Hannah Lee Fowler.

Hannah filed for divorce from the country music singer on Feb. 18, also listing that as the date of separation, according to Tennessee court documents cited by People and other outlets. The reports state that in her filing, which E! News has not reviewed, she cites “irreconcilable differences” as the reason to terminate the marriage and accuses Hunt of “inappropriate marital conduct” and “adultery.”

Fowler, 33, also notes in the papers that she is pregnant and due to give birth in May, according to the multiple reports. This will be the first child for the former couple.

Hunt, 37, has not responded to Fowler’s divorce filing and neither of them have made any statements about their marriage or reported split. E! News has reached out to their reps for comment.

In her filing, Fowler requested to be granted primary custody of the couple’s future child, and for Hunt to pay her alimony and child support, People reported, adding that she also wants her and her ex to be “awarded their respective separate property.”

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Sam Hunt’s pregnant wife files for divorce citing adultery

Sam Hunt’s wife, Hannah Lee Fowler, filed for divorce in Tennessee Friday after nearly five years of marriage.

The Alabama-born nurse, who revealed in court documents obtained by TMZ Monday that she is pregnant, is accusing the country superstar of cheating on her. She is due in May and it was not publicly known that the former couple were expecting their first child.

Fowler alleged that Hunt, 37, is “guilty of inappropriate marital conduct” and “guilty of adultery.”

The court documents also state, “The husband is guilty of such cruel and inhuman treatment or conduct toward the spouse as renders cohabitation unsafe or improper.”

Hunt’s reps did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment.

Fowler is seeking child support and primary custody of their unborn child, their “respective separate property” and three different kinds of alimony, including “transitional alimony, rehabilitative alimony, and alimony in future,” per the documents.

Fowler, who has been married to Hunt for four years, is not active on Instagram.
WireImage

The last time the “Body Like a Back Road” singer posted about his now-estranged wife on Instagram was in April 2021 for their fourth wedding anniversary.

He captioned a slideshow that featured a throwback pic of Fowler kissing him and a more current picture of the pair laughing, saying, “How it started. How its going. Happy Anniversary!”

In July, Hunt told a Miami radio station that he and Fowler were considering having kids “sooner than later.”

“[We’ve] really started to think about it seriously here these past few months, so that’s on the agenda right now,” the “Hard to Forget” singer said. “I’m hoping we’ll have some good news sooner than later.”

Hunt and Fowler were married in 2017. They met in Alabama, when the “Take Your Time” singer was a linebacker for the University of Alabama at Birmingham.



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Walmart’s InHome hunts for ways to ditch single-use plastics

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

Nicholas Pizzolato

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.

Last fall, Walmart swapped out disposable bags for tote bags that it collected, washed and used again for the subscription service.

The pilot project, which was limited to a single store near the New York metro area, is part of Walmart’s broader effort to deliver on a pledge to move toward reusable, recyclable or industrially compostable packaging for its private brands and reach zero waste in its own operations in the U.S. and Canada by 2025.

In the first half of 2022, Walmart plans to test alternatives to single-use plastic for curbside pickup and home delivery, said Jane Ewing, Walmart’s senior vice president of sustainability. Those services are fast-growing parts of Walmart’s grocery business, after shoppers got used to the convenience during the pandemic.

Wall Street, lawmakers and consumers have put pressure on publicly traded companies to set lofty sustainability goals. A growing number of states, major U.S. cities and countries are banning or charging fees for single-use plastics. Consumers, particularly millennials and Gen Zers, are paying more attention to companies’ environmental impact. And investors are considering environmental, social and governance policies as a factor when deciding when to buy or sell a company’s stock.

Judith Enck, president of the nonprofit Beyond Plastics, said companies are “reading the writing on the wall,” much as they did when states and cities began passing laws that phased in higher minimum wages.

Yet she said she has grown weary of seeing retailers and consumer-packaged goods companies make promises that come with yearslong timetables and incremental steps toward compliance.

“Companies need to be bolder and they need to move faster,” she said. “These shouldn’t be pilots. They should be standard store policy.”

From cucumbers to clamshells

At Walmart, Ewing said her team scours store aisles and backrooms for ways to eliminate plastics from its supply chain, from films that wrap up pallets of merchandise to clamshells that hold leafy greens.

She said Walmart is especially focused on finding ways to keep fruits and vegetables fresh with packaging like what it devised with start-up Apeel: an invisible, edible plant-based coating on a cucumber instead of shrink-wrapping it in plastic.

Yet progress can be slow. For example, Walmart recently removed a plastic window from a box that holds plastic cutlery sold by its private label, Ewing said. That small change will be multiplied across inventory throughout its more than 4,700 U.S. stores. But that doesn’t solve the underlying problem — the plastic utensils themselves.

What’s more, private brands only drive a fraction of Walmart’s total sales. That means it must ultimately coax suppliers to change packaging to shift the balance of single-use plastics at Walmart’s stores. Eliminating or cutting back on packaging is one of the key parts of Project Gigaton, an effort that Walmart launched five years ago that aims to reduce one gigaton of greenhouse gas emissions from the company’s supply chains by 2030.

Walmart is part of Beyond the Bag, an initiative by retailers including Target, CVS Health, Kroger and others to look for ways to remove single-use plastic bags from the environment.

For its part, Walmart has tried Goatote and Chico Bags, two different kiosk systems that allow shoppers to borrow and return reusable bags, and Fill it Forward, an app-enabled tag that customers can add to their own bag, which tracks and incentivizes use by giving rewards.

“Most customers want to do the right thing; they want to lead a more sustainable life,” Ewing said. “But as a retailer, we have to make it easy for them. If it’s too complex, too hard, they’re not going to do it. So we have to figure out how can we build this into the flow of their regular shopping experience and take out the pain points for them.”

By the end of this year, Walmart plans to expand the InHome delivery service’s availability from 6 million to 30 million households. The subscription program costs $19.95 per month.

In the coming months, the grocer envisions that millions more customers will get their milk, pasta and other purchases delivered to the kitchen or garage with reusable tote bags, Ewing said.

Walmart has yet to decide its geographic markets or how many customers will receive the tote service, but Ewing said it will expand the pilot in the Northeast. Ultimately, she said she would like to see the totes used by InHome across the country.

Sustainability is built into other parts of the InHome initiative. For example, Walmart has reserved 5,000 electric delivery vans from General Motors for the service.

A circular system

The tote bags for the InHome pilot are made by Returnity, a company that is trying to move retailers and consumer-packaged goods brands away from disposable boxes and bags and toward a circular system of containers that can be reused. Returnity has developed packaging for Estee Lauder, New Balance and Rent the Runway.

Mike Newman, CEO of Returnity, said for the model to work, reusable packaging must make sense financially. That means packaging that is used frequently, designed with recycled plastics or other sustainable materials, with a return rate of more than 92%. With the Walmart program, he said, the return rate was nearly 100%.

Returnity counts James Reinhart, CEO and co-founder of online thrift store ThredUp, as one of its early investors.

At ThredUp, reusable packaging flopped and became a telling lesson, Newman said. Too many customers just tossed company-provided bags rather than reuse them, he said.

“You have to be cost competitive,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how green it is. If it can’t be economically viable, it’s never going anywhere.”

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