Retailers face pressure to change chemical-coated receipt paper

Health, labour and environmental groups join forces in asking 13 retailers, including the country’s largest grocers, to stop using paper that is said to contain hormone-disrupting chemicals
8/22/2019
Shutterstock/somkku

Some of Canada's biggest retailers started testing alternatives
to receipt paper that's coated in potentially dangerous chemicals, as pressure mounts for them to phase it out by the end of this year.

"We urge you to take immediate steps to stop using thermal paper containing bisphenols for receipts and other paper products in Canada," reads a letter from a conglomerate of health, labour and environmental groups sent to 13 retailers, including major grocers and fast-food chains.

"BPA is a hormone-disrupting chemical that can interfere with the critical function of hormones in the human body and has been found to damage fertility, harm the fetus, and cause adverse health outcomes including cancers of the breast and prostate, diabetes, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) in children.''

Bisphenol A (BPA) is an industrial chemical that is used in making polycarbonate, a type of plastic, and epoxy resins.

The Canadian government declared BPA a toxic chemical in October 2010, finding it "constitutes or may constitute a danger to human health and the environment" based on criteria set out in the Canadian Environmental Protection Act. The government made it illegal to manufacture, import, advertise or sell baby bottles with the chemical that same year.

Some retailers removed BPA-coated receipt paper, but replaced it with nearly identical bisphenol substances, like BPS, according to the groups, which include Environmental Defence, the United Food and Commercial Workers Canada, and Breast Cancer Action Quebec. They say these coatings pose a risk to retail workers and consumers.

"The notion that ... by doing one's job that one is being exposed to these toxins would quite naturally concern us," said Derek Johnstone, a spokesman for the UFCW Canada, which represents thousands of cashiers.

"It's something that is within the control of all major retailers in Canada," he said, adding he'd like to see companies commit to a timeline for removing these chemicals from their receipts.

Loblaw Companies Limited, one of the companies the letter targeted, stopped using BPA receipts in 2012, wrote spokeswoman Catherine Thomas in an email.

It plans to transition away from bisphenol-coated receipts completely in the future and is already testing alternative papers, she said, adding the company also offers electronic-receipt or no receipt options at almost all of its stores now, and offers workers gloves.

She declined to provide a timeline for when Loblaw would no longer use bisphenol-coated receipts, saying the company is in the early stages of testing.

Cineplex, Metro, Walmart Canada and McDonald's Canada deferred questions to the Retail Council of Canada.

Many retailers have switched to BPA-free paper, while others intend to stop using bisphenol-coated paper completely and have started testing alternatives, wrote spokesman Andrew Telfer.

The council would not answer questions about the four companies that deferred questions to it.

It "does not otherwise comment on business decisions including the sourcing of supplies and equipment," he said.

Seven other companies who received the letter--A&W Food Services of Canada, Best Buy Canada, Canadian Tire Corporation, Costco Wholesale Canada, Empire Company Limited, Lowe's Canada and Restaurant Brands International--did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

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