James Davorn
17 April, 2025
Business

McDonald's volunteers from nine local restaurants take part in litter picks

Local McDonald’s restaurant teams from across the Royal Borough of Greenwich area and southeast London have taken part in litter events in a bid to keep their local areas tidy. 18 crew members and helpers from the restaurants, which are owned and operated by local Franchisee Taimoor Sheikh, collected an impressive 58 bags of rubbish between them across two litter picks. Areas tidied up included Woolwich Dockyard and Erith riverside in Bexley.

Local McDonald's collected an impressive 58 bags of rubbish

McDonald’s Franchisee Taimoor Sheikh who owns and operates the restaurants, said: “I couldn’t be prouder of my fantastic team for giving their time to their local community, ensuring the areas we all enjoy are clear of litter – making them a better and brighter place for those that live here. We continue to put people at the very heart of what we do, and this is just one example of our dedication to being a good neighbour. 

McDonald’s crew members have been cleaning up litter dropped in local communities for over 35 years. Crews across the UK cover a total of 5,000 miles each week on litter patrols (where they collect all types of litter, not just McDonald’s branded packaging). This equates to 260,000 miles, or the distance from Earth to the Moon since the programme began in the late ‘80s.

Local McDonald's volunteers helped tidied up areas in Greenwich
Local McDonald's volunteers helped tidied up areas in Greenwich Credit: McDonald's

McDonald’s is tackling litter in local communities, both by litter picking and reducing the amount of waste its restaurants produce. The brand has been working to make recycling easier over the past four years too, and since 2015, has installed over 1,100 new recycling units, meaning it’s easier to separate plastics and cups for recycling in 85% of its restaurants. McDonald’s also collects used oil from its kitchens and turns this into enough biodiesel to fuel more than half of its delivery fleet.