They're known for breaking rules in order to give customers cheaper goods 
(never by cheating).   As well as the retention of imperial they have mass 
bought grey market goods before to sell on.  I think it's the EU that has had 
the most issues with Tesco.  Ah well.  This all reminds me - I need to do a 
shop down there today! :-)

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [USMA:47500] RE: Tesco grocery chain in the UK is (at least online) 
all metric
Date: Sat, 5 Jun 2010 07:13:26 +0100
























A few years ago the British Trading
Standards Office were preparing to “throw the book” at Tesco in respect of a
number of sharp practices.  A report in the “Sunday Times” listed a dozen or
so, but failure to use metrication was not explicitly listed.  I have a feeling
that this was excluded from the “public” list as this might well be picked up
by the anti-metric brigade to say that Tesco were “jolly good fellows – look how
they are giving Brussels the ‘two-fingered salute’”

 









From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of [email protected]

Sent: 05 June 2010 05:30

To: U.S. Metric Association

Subject: [USMA:47499] Tesco
grocery chain in the UK
is (at least online) all metric



 



I forgot that I had registered online
with Tesco's in the UK
(one of the major grocery chains) and just received an email update from them.



At least online I see that Tesco is 100% metric in all the web pages on their
site that I took a look at in various departments. This includes the meat cuts
packaged by Tesco itself in the butcher department.



The only unfortunate part is that most of the symbols have errors, such as
"G" for grams, Ml for "milliliters", etc.



However, the nutritional information is all metric with proper symbols; the
only (minor) exception is that energy, while given in kJ, is also given in
parentheses afterwards in kcal (though at least this unit is less ambiguous
than "Calories").



I wonder if the shelf labels and the labels at the deli counter inside the
store follow the same pattern as the online store. Note that the online store
targets Britons just as much as its in-store information does (i.e. the web
site does not target residents of other countries).



-- Ezra



                                          
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