Helping Who Gives A Crap ship over 9m toilet rolls – and save over 54,000kg of carbon

It's November 2024, which means we teamed up with Who Gives A Crap just over a year ago.

So, we thought we'd run some numbers, crunch a few equations and try to work out exactly how many toilet visits we've made possible...

Try as we might, it turns out that number is tough to estimate.

We can, however, share some cool stats from our partnership to-date. Let's start with the big one.

Over NINE MILLION toilet rolls 🧻🧻🧻

That is quite frankly a lot – and it will become over 10 MILLION before the end of the year!

In delivering all of those toilet rolls, our ultra-efficient, all-electric fleet has helped Who Gives A Crap save approximately 54,500kg of carbon emissions.

That's equivalent to flying 149,129 miles less on a plane, or gaining the environmental processing power of about 900 mature trees.

And it means that, from working with Packfleet alone, Who Gives A Crap is set to reduce the total carbon emitted by its UK-EU region by 0.6%.

But it's not just about that whole saving the environment/benefiting the planet thing!

Our transparent, user-friendly recipient experience, has resulted in Who Gives A Crap seeing a 25% drop in customer queries on the whereabouts of their orders.

Turns out, life just runs smoother when you know where your toilet paper is.

'Random acts of crapiness'

As well as delivering millions of toilet rolls and reducing customer headaches, the Packfleet x Who Gives A Crap partnership has also seen a bit of job swapping...

Members of the WGAC team visited our Bermondsey depot and became Packfleet drivers for the day, heading out on London's roads to meet their customers on their doorsteps.

Stocked with cupcakes, fliers, dog treats, tissue boxes and, of course, loo rolls, the team spent the day giving a special welcome to their new customers and saying thanks to their loyal fans.

What became known as ‘random acts of crappiness’ was definitely not a one-off...

Here's to another year of making crappy deliveries a thing of the past for Londoners 💩