Last year, the Sheng Siong chain of supermarkets lost 90 metal
trolleys and 180 plastic ones across its outlets on average each
month.
That translates into a shocking $120,000 loss on just trolleys. And
the supermarket chain is not alone.
In the past two years, NTUC FairPrice lost about 1,000 trolleys
annually across more than 90 stores that provide them.
The supermarket chain said it spends about $150,000 annually on
repairing, replacing and retrieving abandoned trolleys.
When asked if this was a rising trend, Sheng Siong said that they
could not tell as some customers do return the trolleys, though not
immediately, after use.
But in 2012, NTUC FairPrice lost only about 800 trolleys across
over 80 stores, suggesting a rise in the number of unreturned
trolleys as compared to 2014 and 2015.
For the supermarkets, store personnel retrieve the trolleys from
nearby housing estates, pavements and taxi stands from time to
time.
Customers are required to deposit a one-dollar coin into the metal
trolley when they borrow one from Sheng Siong supermarket, but
plastic ones do not require any deposit.
Likewise, NTUC FairPrice supermarkets' trolleys require a deposit
of either a one-dollar coin from the old coin series or a 50-cent
coin from the new coin series. Their baskets can be borrowed
without a deposit.
To prevent more trolleys from being wheeled out of their stores,
Sheng Siong has roped in their cashiers and frontline personnel to
remind customers that the trolleys are meant for in-store use
only.
A Sheng Siong spokesman said: "Should any customer wheel our
trolley out of our store operating premises, our staff will
approach the customer and assist in collecting it back."
One Sheng Siong outlet, however, has an interesting approach to
tackling this problem.
For years, the supermarket branch at Block 6A, Woodlands Centre
Road, has been asking customers to deposit one of their shopping
items at the counter to ensure that they would come back to return
the trolley.
The spokesman said: "That location is unique because it only has
one trolley point, is sheltered and is near a carpark.
"Such a method of reminding customers to return the trolley is not
so feasible in our other supermarket locations."
NTUC FairPrice has tackled this issue in a different way.
Apart from putting up signs at trolley points and playing
pre-recorded messages in the stores to remind shoppers that
trolleys should only be used in and around the store and returned
thereafter, NTUC FairPrice has also partnered town councils to
educate the public and encourage customers to be responsible in
returning the trolleys.
An NTUC FairPrice spokesman said: "We're also in contact with
community and government agencies to raise public awareness and
education on responsible trolley use.
"We ask that our customers, too, help spread the word and remind
their friends and family to return shopping trolleys so that the
next customer gets to use it too."
Despite the trend of unreturned trolleys, Sheng Siong has not made
any police reports so far.
NTUC FairPrice said they reserve the right to file a police report
for any damage to their trolleys or for trolleys that are
unreturned.
Its spokesman said: "We feel that public education and appealing to
the innate responsible behaviour of shoppers would still be the
best way to address this issue, even though it may take a longer
time to change shoppers' behaviour."
Cold Storage, Giant and Mustafa Shopping Centre were unable to
respond by press time.
Engineer Maximilian Tan, 25, who shops at NTUC FairPrice thrice a
week, said: "People who don't return their trolleys after use are
not doing a service to the community and to the supermarket because
of the loss incurred to replace the unreturned trolleys."
Housewife Adeline Tan, 58, who shops at NTUC FairPrice every day
and at Sheng Siong twice a week, said: "It's the moral
responsibility of customers to return trolleys after use and people
who don't do so are inconsiderate and selfish.
"Perhaps supermarkets can look into raising the amount of money
required to borrow the trolleys as a deterrence to those who don't
plan on returning them."

This article was first published on January 26,
2016.