Halifax could be the latest Canadian city with a grocery store dedicated to people living a 鈥渮ero waste鈥 lifestyle.

which is expected to open in the fall, will encourage customers to bring their own reusable containers and jars.

Employees will weigh the containers, customers will fill them with bulk items, and then containers will be weighed again at the cash register to determine the bill.

Kate Peppler told CTV Atlantic that the store will help consumers cut down on packaging, which accounts for 40 per cent of waste, according to the Recycling Council of British Columbia.

One of the biggest problems is plastic, which is increasingly ending up in the world鈥檚 oceans and endangering marine life, Peppler says.

鈥淲e as a society are so addicted to plastic and it鈥檚 used everywhere,鈥 Peppler says.

鈥淧eople grab those plastic film bags to put bananas in, lettuce is wrapped in plastic, celery, carrots ... frozen pizza ... everything you get (is) in plastic,鈥 she says.

Peppler said that that if someone had asked her two or three years ago if she would now be living a zero-waste lifestyle, she 鈥渨ould have said no way,鈥 but she gradually figured out how to do it.

鈥淚 started making small changes,鈥 she said. Those included things like cutting out disposable water bottle and single-use coffee cups.

She鈥檚 since begun ordering drinks without plastic straws, using shampoo bars instead of liquid shampoo from plastic bottles, and bamboo toothbrushes.

It hasn鈥檛 always been easy to find the products she needs. 鈥淲hen Bulk Barn started doing its that was huge as it helped me to be able to get stuff package free,鈥 she said.

Peppler鈥檚 store could make it even easier.

And it wouldn鈥檛 be the first in Canada.

has been operating since 2011 and now offers more than 700 products, including olive oil and soy sauce on tap.

Mega Vrac Epicerie in Montreal offers a similar number of products, including detergents in jugs and maple syrup on tap.

Last summer, Ottawa got what may be Nu Grocery sells including cleaners and beauty products.

Anna Weinstein, communications specialist with Halifax鈥檚 told CTV Atlantic that people who are interested in a zero-waste lifestyle can start by cutting out bottled water and disposable coffee cups.

鈥淭he zero waste lifestyle can be really intimidating for people,鈥 Weinstein said.

鈥淏ut starting to think about what that lifestyle means is really a way for us to understand our own impact and make changes that are feasible and sustainable where we can,鈥 she added

With a report from CTV Atlantic鈥檚 Emily Baron Caldoff and files from The Canadian Press