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Food loss and waste

Food loss and waste is food that is not eaten. The causes of food waste or loss are numerous and occur throughout the food system, during production, processing, distribution, retail and food service sales, and consumption. Overall, about one-third of the world's food is thrown away.[2][3] A 2021 meta-analysis, that did not include food lost during production, by the United Nations Environment Programme found that food waste was a challenge in all countries at all levels of economic development.[4] The analysis estimated that global food waste was 931 million tonnes of food waste (about 121 kg per capita) across three sectors: 61 percent from households, 26 percent from food service and 13 percent from retail.[4]

Fruit and vegetables in a dumpster, discarded uneaten
Food recovered by food waste critic Robin Greenfield in Madison, Wisconsin, from two days of recovery from dumpsters[1]

Food loss and waste is a major part of the impact of agriculture on climate change (it amounts to 3.3 billion tons of CO2e emissions annually[5][6]) and other environmental issues, such as land use, water use and loss of biodiversity. Prevention of food waste is the highest priority, and when prevention is not possible, the food waste hierarchy ranks the food waste treatment options from preferred to least preferred based on their negative environmental impacts.[7] Reuse pathways of surplus food intended for human consumption, such as food donation, is the next best strategy after prevention, followed by animal feed, recycling of nutrients and energy followed by the least preferred option, landfill, which is a major source of the greenhouse gas methane.[8] Other considerations include unreclaimed phosphorus in food waste leading to further phosphate mining. Moreover, reducing food waste in all parts of the food system is an important part of reducing the environmental impact of agriculture, by reducing the total amount of water, land, and other resources used.

The UN's Sustainable Development Goal Target 12.3 seeks to "halve global per capita food waste at the retail and consumer levels and reduce food losses along production and supply chains, including post-harvest losses" by 2030.[9] Climate change mitigation strategies prominently feature reducing food waste.[10][failed verification] In the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations agree to reduce food waste by 50% by the year 2030.[11]

Definition edit

 
A conceptual framework for food loss and waste (FLW)[12]

Food loss and waste occurs at all stages of the food supply chain – production, processing, sales, and consumption.[13][12] Definitions of what constitutes food loss versus food waste or what parts of foods (i.e., inedible parts) exit the food supply chain are considered lost or wasted vary.[12] Terms are often defined on a situational basis (as is the case more generally with definitions of waste).[13][14] Professional bodies, including international organizations, state governments, and secretariats may use their own definitions.[15]

United Nations edit

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations defines food loss and waste as the decrease in quantity or quality of food along the food supply chain. Within this framework, UN Agencies distinguish loss and waste at two different stages in the process:[16]

  • Food loss occurs along the food supply chain from harvest/slaughter/catch up to, but not including, the sales level
  • Food waste occurs at the retail and consumption level.

Important components of this definition include:[12]

  • Food redirected to nonfood chains (including animal feed, compost, or recovery to bioenergy) is not counted as food loss or waste. Inedible parts are not considered as food loss or waste (these inedible parts are sometimes referred to as unavoidable food waste)[12]

Under Sustainable Development Goal 12, the Food and Agriculture Organization is responsible for measuring food loss, while the UN Environmental Program measures food waste.[17]

European Union edit

 
Protest against food waste, Berlin, Germany

In the European Union (EU), food waste is defined by combining the definitions of food and waste, namely: "any substance or product, whether processed, partially processed or unprocessed, intended to be, or reasonably expected to be ingested by humans (...)" (including things such as drinks and chewing gum; excluding things such as feed, medicine, cosmetics, tobacco products, and narcotic or psychotropic substances) "which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard".[18]: 2–3 

Previously, food waste was defined by directive 75/442/EEC as "any food substance, raw or cooked, which is discarded, or intended or required to be discarded" in 1975.[19] In 2006, 75/442/EEC was repealed by 2006/12/EC,[19] which defined waste as "any substance or object in the categories set out in Annex I which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard".[20] Meanwhile, Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 178/2002 (the General Food Law Regulation), as amended on 1 July 2022, defined food as "any substance or product, whether processed, partially processed or unprocessed, intended to be, or reasonably expected to be ingested by humans (...)", including things such as drinks and chewing gum, excluding things such as feed, medicine, cosmetics, tobacco products, and narcotic or psychotropic substances.[21]

A 2016 European Court of Auditors special report had criticised the lack of a common definition of food waste as hampering progress, and a May 2017 resolution by the European Parliament supported a legally binding definition of food waste.[18]: 4, 6  Finally, the 2018/851/EU directive of 30 May 2018 (the revised Waste Framework Directive) combined the two (after waste was redefined in 2008 by Article 3.1 of 2008/98/EC as "any substance or object which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard"[22]) by defining food waste as "all food as defined in Article 2 of Regulation (EC) No 178/2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council that has become waste."[18]: 2–3 

United States edit

 
Food waste alternative.

As of 2022, the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) employed three categories:[23]

  • "Excess food refers to food that is recovered and donated to feed people."
  • "Food waste refers to food such as plate waste (i.e., food that has been served but not eaten), spoiled food, or peels and rinds considered inedible that is sent to feed animals, to be composted or anaerobically digested, or to be landfilled or combusted with energy recovery."
  • "Food loss refers to unused product from the agricultural sector, such as unharvested crops."

In 2006, the EPA defined food waste as "uneaten food and food preparation wastes from residences and commercial establishments such as grocery stores, restaurants, produce stands, institutional cafeterias and kitchens, and industrial sources like employee lunchrooms".[24]

The states remain free to define food waste differently for their purposes,[25][26] though as of 2009, many had not done so.[27]

Other definitions edit

Bellemare et al. (2017) compared four definitions from:[13]: 4 

  1. a Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) 2016 report: "Food loss is defined as ‘the decrease in quantity or quality of food.’ Food waste is part of food loss and refers to discarding or alternative (nonfood) use of food that is safe and nutritious for human consumption along the entire food supply chain, from primary production to end household consumer level";
  2. an Economic Research Service (ERS; a USDA agency) 2014 report: "Food loss represents the amount of food postharvest, that is available for human consumption but is not consumed for any reason. It includes cooking loss and natural shrinkage (for example, moisture loss); loss from mould, pests, or inadequate climate control; and food waste. Food waste is a component of food loss and occurs when an edible item goes unconsumed, as in food discarded by retailers due to color or appearance, and plate waste by consumers";
  3. a FUSIONS (an EU project) 2016 report: "Food waste is any food, and inedible parts of food, removed from the food supply chain to be recovered or disposed (including composed [sic], crops ploughed in/not harvested, anaerobic digestion, bioenergy production, co-generation, incineration, disposal to sewer, landfill or discarded to sea)"; and
  4. an EPA 2016 report: "The amount of food going to landfills from residences, commercial establishments (e.g., grocery stores and restaurants), institutional sources (e.g., school cafeterias), and industrial sources (e.g., factory lunchrooms). Pre-consumer food generated during the manufacturing and packaging of food products is not included in EPA's food waste estimates."

According to Bellemare et al., the inclusion of food that goes to nonfood productive use is flawed for two reasons: "First, if recovered food is used as an input, such as animal feed, fertilizer, or biomass to produce output, then by definition it is not wasted. However, there might be economic losses if the cost of recovered food is higher than the average cost of inputs in the alternative, nonfood use. Second, the definition creates practical problems for measuring food waste because the measurement requires tracking food loss in every stage of the supply chain and its proportion that flows to nonfood uses."[13]: 4  They argued that only food that ends up in landfills should be counted as food waste, pointing to the 2016 EPA definition as a good example.[13]: 4  Bellemare et al. also noted that "the FAO and ERS definitions only apply to edible and safe and nutritious food, whereas the definitions of FUSIONS and the EPA apply to both edible and inedible parts of food. Finally, the ERS and EPA definitions of food waste exclude the food that is not harvested at the farm level."[13]: 4 

A 2019 FAO report stated:

'The notion of food being lost or wasted is deceptively simple, but in practice there is no commonly agreed definition of food loss and waste. FAO has worked towards the harmonization of concepts related to food loss and waste, and the definitions adopted in this report are the result of a consensus reached in consultation with experts in this field. This report understands food loss and waste as the decrease in quantity or quality of food along the food supply chain. Empirically it considers food losses as occurring along the food supply chain from harvest/slaughter/catch up to, but not including, the retail level. Food waste, on the other hand, occurs at the retail and consumption level. This definition also aligns with the distinction implicit in SDG Target 12.3. This report also asserts that, although there may be an economic loss, food diverted to other economic uses, such as animal feed, is not considered as quantitative food loss or waste. Similarly, inedible parts are not considered as food loss or waste.'[12]: 9–10 

Methodology edit

The 2019 FAO report stated: "Food loss and waste has typically been measured in physical terms using tonnes as reporting units. This measurement fails to account for the economic value of different commodities and can risk attributing a higher weight to low-value products just because they are heavier. [This] report acknowledges this by adopting a measure that accounts for the economic value of produce."[12]: 10  Hall et al. (2009) calculated food waste in the United States in terms of energy value "by comparing the US food supply data with the calculated food consumed by the US population." The result was that food waste among American consumers increased from "about 30% of the available food supply in 1974 to almost 40% in recent years" (the early 2000s), or about 900 kcal per person per day (1974) to about 1400 kcal per person per day (2003).[28] A 2012 Natural Resources Defense Council report interpreted this to mean that Americans threw away up to 40% of food that was safe to eat.[29] Buzby & Hyman (2012) estimated both the total weight (in kg and lbs) and monetary value (in USD) of food loss in the United States, concluding that "the annual value of food loss is almost 10% of the average amount spent on food per consumer in 2008".[30]

Sources edit

 

Production edit

In the United States, food loss can occur at most stages of the food industry and in significant amounts.[31] In subsistence agriculture, the amounts of food loss are unknown, but are likely to be insignificant by comparison, due to the limited stages at which loss can occur, and given that food is grown for projected need as opposed to a global marketplace demand.[32][33] Nevertheless, on-farm losses in storage in developing countries, particularly in African countries, can be high although the exact nature of such losses is much debated.[34]

In the food industry of the United States, the food supply of which is the most diverse and abundant of any country in the world, loss occurs from the beginning of food production chain.[31] From planting, crops can be subjected to pest infestations and severe weather,[35][36] which cause losses before harvest.[31] Since natural forces (e.g. temperature and precipitation) remain the primary drivers of crop growth, losses from these can be experienced by all forms of outdoor agriculture.[37] On average, farms in the United States lose up to six billion pounds of crops every year because of these unpredictable conditions.[38] According to the IPCC sixth assessment report, encouraging the development of technologies that address issues in food harvesting and post-harvesting could have a significant impact on decreasing food waste in the supply chain early-on.[39]

The use of machinery in harvesting can cause loss, as harvesters may be unable to discern between ripe and immature crops, or collect only part of a crop.[31] Economic factors, such as regulations and standards for quality and appearance,[40] also cause food waste; farmers often harvest selectively, preferring to leave crops not to standard in the field (where they can be used as fertilizer or animal feed), since they would otherwise be discarded later.[31] This method of removing undesirable produce from harvest collection, distribution sites and grocery stores is called culling.[41] However, usually when culling occurs at the production, food processing, retail and consumption stages, it is to remove or dispose of produce with a strange or imperfect appearance rather than produce that is spoiled or unsafe to eat.[42] In urban areas, fruit and nut trees often go unharvested because people either do not realize that the fruit is edible or they fear that it is contaminated, despite research which shows that urban fruit is safe to consume.[43]

Food processing edit

Food loss continues in the post-harvest stage, but the amounts of post-harvest loss involved are relatively unknown and difficult to estimate.[44]: 1  Regardless, the variety of factors that contribute to food loss, both biological/environmental and socio-economical, would limit the usefulness and reliability of general figures.[44]: 1, 7–8  In storage, considerable quantitative losses can be attributed to pests and micro-organisms.[45][46] This is a particular problem for countries that experience a combination of heat (around 30 °C) and ambient humidity (between 70 and 90 per cent), as such conditions encourage the reproduction of insect pests and micro-organisms.[47] Losses in the nutritional value, caloric value and edibility of crops, by extremes of temperature, humidity or the action of micro-organisms,[48] also account for food waste.[49] Further losses are generated in the handling of food and by shrinkage in weight or volume.[31]

Some of the food loss produced by processing can be difficult to reduce without affecting the quality of the finished product.[15]: 3  Food safety regulations are able to claim foods that contradict standards before they reach markets.[31] Although this can conflict with efforts to reuse food loss (such as in animal feed),[50] safety regulations are in place to ensure the health of the consumer; they are vitally important, especially in the processing of foodstuffs of animal origin (e.g. meat and dairy products), as contaminated products from these sources can lead to and are associated with microbiological and chemical hazards.[51][52]

Retail edit

 
Discarded bagels

Packaging protects food from damage during its transportation from farms and factories via warehouses to retailing, as well as preserving its freshness upon arrival.[53] Although it avoids considerable food waste,[53][54] packaging can compromise efforts to reduce food waste in other ways, such as by contaminating waste that could be used for animal feedstocks with plastics.[55]

In 2013, the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) performed research that suggests that the leading cause of food waste in America is due to uncertainty over food expiration dates, such as confusion in deciphering best-before, sell-by, or use-by dates.[56] Joined by Harvard's Food Law and Policy Clinic, the NRDC produced a study called The Dating Game: How Confusing Food Date Labels Leads to Food Waste in America.[57] This United States-based study looked at the intertwining laws which lead labeling to end up unclear and erratic.[58] This uncertainty leads to consumers to toss food, most often because they think the food may be unsafe or misunderstand the labeling on the food completely. Lack of regulation on labeling can result in large quantities of food being removed from the market overall.[56]

Retail stores throw away large quantities of food. Usually, this consists of items that have reached either their best-before, sell-by, or use-by dates. Some stores make an effort to markdown these goods with systems like discount stickers, stores have widely varying policies to handle the excess food. Much of the food discarded by stores is still edible. Some stores put effort into preventing access to poor or homeless people, while others work with charitable organization to distribute food. Retailers also contribute to waste as a result of their contractual arrangements with suppliers. Failure to supply agreed quantities renders farmers or processors liable to have their contracts cancelled. As a consequence, they plan to produce more than actually required to meet the contract, to have a margin of error. Surplus production is often simply disposed of.[59]

Retailers usually have strict cosmetic standards for produce, and if fruits or vegetables are misshapen or superficially bruised, they are often not put on the shelf. In the United States, some of the estimated six billion pounds of produce wasted each year are discarded because of appearance.[60] The USDA publishes guidelines used as a baseline assessment by produce distributors, grocery stores, restaurants and other consumers in order to rate the quality of food.[61] These guidelines and how they rate are readily available on their website. For example, apples get graded by their size, color, wax residue, firmness, and skin appearance. If apples rank highly in these categories and show close to no superficial defects, they are rated as "U.S. Extra Fancy" or "U.S. Fancy", these are the typical ratings sought out by grocery stores when purchasing their produce.[62] Any apples with suboptimal levels of appearance are ranked as either "U.S. Number 1" or "Utility" and are not normally purchased for retail, as recommended by produce marketing sources, despite being safe and edible.[62][63] A number of regional programs and organizations have been established by the EPA and USDA in an attempt to reduce such produce waste.[64][65] Organizations in other countries, such as Good & Fugly in Australia and No Food Waste in India, are making similar efforts worldwide.[66][67] The popular trend of selling "imperfect" produce at retail has been criticized for overlooking existing markets for these foods (eg the food processing industry and bargain grocery stores) and downplaying the household-level wasting of food that is statistically a larger part of the overall problem.[68]

The fishing industry wastes substantial amounts of food: about 40–60% of fish caught in Europe is discarded as the wrong size or wrong species.

This comes to about 2.3 million tonnes per annum in the North Atlantic and the North Sea.[59]

Food-service industry edit

 
Lunch leftovers in a restaurant in Seoul

Addressing food waste requires involving multiple stakeholders throughout the food supply chain, which is a market-driven system. Each stakeholder and their food waste quantification can be dependent on geographical scales.[69] This geographical scale then results in the production of different definitions of food waste, as mentioned earlier, with respect to the complexities of food supply chains and then create a narrative that further shows the needs for specific research on important stakeholders.[69] The food service industry suggests to be a key stakeholder to achieve mitigation.[70] The key players within the food service industry include the manufacturers, producers, farmers, managers, employees, and consumers. The key factors relating to food waste in restaurants include the food menu, the production procedure, the use of pre-prepared versus whole food products, dinnerware size, type of ingredients used, the dishes served, opening hours, and disposal methods.[71] These factors then can be categorized in the different stages of operations that relate to pre-kitchen, kitchen-based, and post-kitchen processes.[72]

In restaurants in developing countries, the lack of infrastructure and associated technical and managerial skills in food production have been identified as the key drivers in the creation of food waste currently and in the future.[69] Comparatively, the majority of food waste in developed countries tends to be produced post-consumer, which is driven by the low prices of food, greater disposable income, consumers' high expectations of food cosmetic standards, and the increasing disconnect between consumers and how food is being produced (Urbanization).[69] That being said, in United States restaurants alone, an estimated 22 to 33 billion pounds are wasted each year.[73]

Serving plate size reduction has been identified as an intervention effective at reducing restaurant food waste.[74] Under such interventions, restaurants decrease the size of plates for meals provided to diners. Similar interventions which have been found to be effective at reducing restaurant food waste include utilizing reusable rather than disposable plates and decreasing serving size.[74]

Consumption edit

Consumers are directly and indirectly responsible for wasting a lot of food, which could for a large part be avoided if they were willing to accept suboptimal food (SOF) that deviates in sensory characteristics (odd shapes, discolorations) or has a best-before date that is approaching or has passed, but is still perfectly fine to eat.[75] In addition to inedible and edible food waste generated by consumers, substantial amounts of food is wasted through food overconsumption, also referred to as metabolic food waste,[76][77][78][79] estimated globally as 10% of foods reaching the consumer.[80] Several interventions have been designed to achieve food waste reduction at the consumer level, such as reducing portion size and changing plates. However, despite being practical to some extent, these interventions can result in unintended consequences due to the lack of understanding of underlying causes and what influences consumers to act on specific behaviors. Unintended consequences, for example, could be prioritizing unhealthy food at the expense of healthy food or reduced consumption and calorie intake in general.[81]

By sector edit

Fruit and vegetables edit

 
Discarded tomatoes on a compost heap at nurseries in the UK

Post-harvest losses of vegetables and fruit occur at all points in the value chain from production in the field to the food being placed on a plate for consumption. Post-harvest activities include harvesting, handling, storage, processing, packaging, transportation and marketing.[82]

Losses of horticultural produce are a major problem in the post-harvest chain. They can be caused by a wide variety of factors, ranging from growing conditions to handling at retail level. Not only are losses clearly a waste of food, but they also represent a similar waste of human effort, farm inputs, livelihoods, investments, and scarce resources such as water.[83] Post-harvest losses for horticultural produce are, however, difficult to measure. In some cases everything harvested by a farmer may end up being sold to consumers. In others, losses or waste may be considerable. Occasionally, losses may be 100%, for example when there is a price collapse and it would cost the farmer more to harvest and market the produce than to plough it back into the ground. Use of average loss figures is thus often misleading. There can be losses in quality, as measured both by the price obtained and the nutritional value, as well as in quantity.

Grains edit

 
Grain silos in Australia

Grains may be lost in the pre-harvest, harvest, and post-harvest stages. Pre-harvest losses occur before the process of harvesting begins, and may be due to insects, weeds, and rusts. Harvest losses occur between the beginning and completion of harvesting, and are primarily caused by losses due to shattering. Post-harvest losses occur between harvest and the moment of human consumption. They include on-farm losses, such as when grain is threshed, winnowed, and dried. Other on-farm losses include inadequate harvesting time, climatic conditions, practices applied at harvest and handling, and challenges in marketing produce. Significant losses are caused by inadequate storage conditions as well as decisions made at earlier stages of the supply chain, including transportation, storage, and processing, which predispose products to a shorter shelf life.[84]

Important in many developing countries, particularly in Africa, are on-farm losses during storage, when the grain is being stored for auto-consumption or while the farmer awaits a selling opportunity or a rise in prices.

Extent edit

 
Food loss from post-harvest to distribution in 2016, percentages globally and by region[12]
 
Food waste infographic produced by Next Generation Food, 2010

Global extent edit

Efforts are underway by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) to measure progress towards SDG Target 12.3 through two separate indices: the Food Loss Index (FLI) and the Food Waste Index (FWI).[85]

According to FAO's The State of Food and Agriculture 2019, globally, in 2016, around 14 percent of the world's food is lost from production before reaching the retail level. Generally, levels of loss are higher for fruits and vegetables than for cereals and pulses. However, even for the latter, significant levels are found in sub-Saharan Africa and Eastern and South-Eastern Asia, while they are limited in Central and Southern Asia.[12]

Estimates from UN Environment's Food Waste Index suggest that about 931 million tonnes of food, or 17 percent of total food available to consumers in 2019, went into the waste bins of households, retailers, restaurants and other food services.[4]

According to a report from Feedback EU, the EU wastes 153 million tonnes of food each year, around double previous estimates.[86]

Earlier estimates edit

In 2011, an FAO publication based on studies carried out by The Swedish Institute for Food and Biotechnology (SIK) found that the total of global amount of food loss and waste was around one third of the edible parts of food produced for human consumption, amounting to about 1.3 billion tonnes (1.28×109 long tons; 1.43×109 short tons) per year.[42]: 4  As the following table shows, industrialized and developing countries differ substantially. In developing countries, it is estimated that 400–500 calories per day per person are wasted, while in developed countries 1,500 calories per day per person are wasted.[87] In the former, more than 40% of losses occur at the post-harvest and processing stages, while in the latter, more than 40% of losses occur at the retail and consumer levels. The total food waste by consumers in industrialized countries (222 million tonnes or 218,000,000 long tons or 245,000,000 short tons) is almost equal to the entire food production in sub-Saharan Africa (230 million tonnes or 226,000,000 long tons or 254,000,000 short tons).[42]: 4 

Food loss and waste per person per year (2007)[42]: 5  Total At the production
and retail stages
By consumers
Europe 280 kg (617 lb) 190 kg (419 lb) 90 kg (198 lb)
North America and Oceania 295 kg (650 lb) 185 kg (408 lb) 110 kg (243 lb)
Industrialized Asia 240 kg (529 lb) 160 kg (353 lb) 80 kg (176 lb)
sub-Saharan Africa 160 kg (353 lb) 155 kg (342 lb) 5 kg (11 lb)
North Africa, West and Central Asia 215 kg (474 lb) 180 kg (397 lb) 35 kg (77 lb)
South and Southeast Asia 125 kg (276 lb) 110 kg (243 lb) 15 kg (33 lb)
Latin America 225 kg (496 lb) 200 kg (441 lb) 25 kg (55 lb)

A 2013 report from the British Institution of Mechanical Engineers (IME) likewise estimated that 30–50% (or 1.2–2 billion tonnes or 1.18×109–1.97×109 long tons or 1.32×109–2.20×109 short tons ) of all food produced remains uneaten.[88]

Individual countries edit

Australia edit

Each year in New South Wales, more than 25 million meals are delivered by charity OzHarvest from food that would otherwise be wasted.[89] Each year, the Australian economy loses $20 billion in food waste. This has a crucial environmental impact through the waste of resources used to produce, manufacture, package, and distribute that food.[90]

In addition, it is estimated that 7.6 million tonnes of CO2 is generated by the disposed food in landfills. It is also the cause of odour, leaching, and potential generation for diseases. In March 2019, the Australian ministry of the environment shared the key findings of Australia's National food waste baseline, which will facilitate the tracking of the progress towards their goal to halve Australian food waste by 2030.[91]

Many initiatives were taken by the Australian government in order to help achieve this goal. In fact, they financed $1.2 million in organization that invest in renewable energies systems to store and transport food. They also funded more than $10 million for research on food waste reduction. Local governments have also implemented programs such as information sessions on storing food and composting, diversion of waste from restaurants and cafes from landfills to shared recycling facilities and donation of food to organization that would otherwise be wasted.

Canada edit

In Canada, 58% of all food is wasted, amounting to 35.5 million tonnes of food per annuum.[92] The value of this lost food is equivalent to CA$21 billion. Such quantities of food would be enough to feed all Canadians for five months. It is estimated that about one-third of this waste could be spared and sent to those in need.[92] There are many factors that contribute to such large-scale waste. Manufacturing and processing food alone incur costs of CA$21 billion, or 4.82 million tons. Per household, it is estimated that $1,766 is lost in food loss and waste.[92] The Government of Canada identifies three main factors contributing to household waste: (1) buying too much food and not eating it before it spoils, (2) malfunctioning or poorly-designed packaging that does not deter spoilage rates or contamination, and (3) improper disposing of food – using garbage bins instead of those intended for organic waste.

Canada, Mexico, and the United States are working together under the Commission for Environmental Cooperation in order to address the severe problem of food waste in North America.[93]

Canada specifically is working in the following ways to reduce food waste:

  • Canada pledged to consult on strategies in the Strategy on Short-lived Climate Pollutants to reduce avoidable food waste within the country. This will help to reduce methane emissions from Canadian landfills.
  • The government has implemented a Food Policy for Canada 2020-09-29 at the Wayback Machine, which is a movement towards a more sustainable food system.
  • In February 2019, the government brought together several experts from different sectors to share ideas and discuss opportunities for measuring and reducing food loss and waste across the food supply chain.

During the 2022 Quebec general election, Québec solidaire party spokesman Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois stated that ending food waste in Quebec would be a priority of the party if in government. The party seeks to cut food waste by 50% by mandating large businesses and institutions to give unsold food to groups that would distribute the food, or to businesses that would process the food.[94]

China edit

In 2015 the Chinese Academy of Sciences reported that in big cities there was 17 to 18 million tons of food waste, enough to feed over 30 million people. About 25% of the waste was staple foods and about 18% meat.[95]

In August 2020 the Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping said the amount of food waste was shocking and distressing. A local authority campaign "Operation empty plate" (Chinese: 光盘行动) was started to reduce waste, including encouraging food outlets to limit orders to one fewer main dish than the number of customers.[95]

As of December 2020, a draft law is under consideration to penalise food outlets if they encourage or mislead customers to order excessive meals causing obvious waste, first with a warning and then fines of up to 10,000 yuan. It would allow restaurants to charge customers who leave excessive leftovers. Broadcasters who promote overeating or food waste could also be fined up to 100,000 yuan.[95]

Denmark edit

According to Ministry of Environment (Denmark), over 700,000 tonnes per year of food is wasted every year in Denmark in the entire food value chain from farm to fork.[96] Due to the work of activist Selina Juul's Stop Wasting Food movement, Denmark has achieved a national reduction in food waste by 25% in 5 years (2010–2015).[97][98][99][100][101][102]

France edit

 
Food waste

In France, approximately 1.3–1.9 million tonnes of food waste is produced every year, or between 20 and 30 kilograms per person per year.[103] Out of the 10 million tonnes of food that is either lost or wasted in the country, 7.1 million tonnes of food wasted in the country, only 11% comes from supermarkets.[104] Not only does this cost the French €16 billion per year, but also the negative impact on the environment is also shocking. In France, food waste emits 15.3 million tonnes of CO2, which represents 3% of the country's total CO2 emission.[105] In response to this issue, in 2016, France became the first country in the world to pass a unanimous legislation that bans supermarkets from throwing away or destroying unsold food. Instead, supermarkets are expected to donate such food to charities and food banks.[106] In addition to donating food, many businesses claim to prevent food waste by selling soon-to-be wasted products at discounted prices. The National Pact Against Food Waste in France has outlined eleven measures to achieve a food waste reduction by half by 2025.[107]

Hungary edit

According to the research of National Food Chain Safety Office in 2019 based on the official EU methodological framework, an average Hungarian consumer generates 68 kg food waste annually. 49% of this amount would be avoidable.[108] The research team (Wasteless project[109]) replicated the study in 2019 involving 165 households.[110] According to the data, food waste generated by the Hungarian households was estimated to be 65.5 kg per capita annually. Between the two periods, a 4% decrease was observed, despite significant economic expansion.

In 2021, The Fidesz government of Viktor Orbán passed a law dealing with food waste.[111][112]

Italy edit

According to REDUCE project, which produced the first baseline dataset for Italy based on official EU methodological framework, food waste is 530 g per person per week at household stage (only edible fraction); food waste in school canteens corresponds to 586 g per pupil per week; retail food waste per capita, per year corresponds to 2.9 kg. See [2]

Netherlands edit

According to Meeusen & Hagelaar (2008), between 30% and 50% of all food produced was estimated to be lost or thrown away at that time in the Netherlands, while a 2010 Agriculture Ministry (LNV) report stated that the Dutch population wasted 'at least 9.5m tonnes of food per year, worth at least €4.4bn.'[113]: 15  In 2019, three studies into food waste in households in the Netherlands commissioned by the LNV were conducted, showing that the average household waste per capita had been reduced from 48 kilograms of "solid food (including dairy products, fats, sauces and soups)" in 2010, to 41.2 kilograms in 2016, to 34.3 kilograms in 2019.[114]: 3–4  The waste of liquid foods (excluding beer and wine, first measured in 2019) that ended up in the sewer through sinks or toilets was analysed to have decreased from 57.3 litres per capita in 2010 to 45.5 litres in 2019.[114]: 3–4, 7 

New Zealand edit

Food waste in New Zealand is one of the many environmental issues that is being addressed by industry, individuals and government.

The total volume of food wasted in New Zealand is not known as food waste has not been investigated at all stages of the supply chain. However, research has been undertaken into household food waste, supermarket food waste and hospitality sector food waste. The Environment Select Committee held a briefing into foodwaste in 2018.

Research done on household food waste in New Zealand found that larger households and households with more young people created more food waste. The average household in this case study put 40% of food waste into the rubbish.[115]

Singapore edit

In Singapore, 788,600 tonnes (776,100 long tons; 869,300 short tons) of food was wasted in 2014.[116] Of that, 101,400 tonnes (99,800 long tons; 111,800 short tons) were recycled.[117] Since Singapore has limited agriculture ability, the country spent about S$14.8 billion (US$10.6 billion) on importing food in 2014. US$1.4 billion of it ends up being wasted, or 13 percent.[118]

On January 1, 2020, Singapore implemented the Zero Waste Masterplan which aims to reduce Singapore's daily waste production by 30 percent. The project also aims to extend the lifespan of the Semaku Landfill, Singapore's only landfill, beyond 2025.[119] As a direct result of the project, food waste dropped to 665,000 tonnes, showing a significant decrease from 2017's all-time high of 810,000 tonnes.[120]

United Kingdom edit

 

Food waste in the United Kingdom is a subject of environmental, and socioeconomic concern that has received widespread media coverage and been met with varying responses from government. Since 1915, food waste has been identified as a considerable problem and has been the subject of ongoing media attention, intensifying with the launch of the "Love Food, Hate Waste" campaign in 2007. Food waste has been discussed in newspaper articles, news reports and television programmes, which have increased awareness of it as a public issue. To tackle waste issues, encompassing food waste, the government-funded "Waste & Resources Action Programme" (WRAP) was created in 2000.

A significant proportion of food waste is produced by the domestic household, which, in 2007, created 6,700,000 tonnes of food waste. Potatoes, bread slices and apples are respectively the most wasted foods by quantity, while salads are thrown away in the greatest proportion. A majority of wasted food is avoidable,[d] with the rest being divided almost equally by foods which are unavoidable (e.g. tea bags) and unavoidable due to preference (e.g. bread crusts) or cooking type (e.g. potato skins).

Reducing the amount of food waste has been deemed critical if the UK is to meet international targets on climate change, limiting greenhouse gas emissions, and meet obligations under the European Landfill Directive to reduce biodegradable waste going to landfill. Equally great emphasis has been placed on the reduction of food waste, across all developed countries, as a means of ending the global food crisis that leaves millions worldwide starving and impoverished. In the context of the 2007–2008 world food price crisis, food waste was discussed at the 34th G8 summit in Hokkaidō, Japan. Then-UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said of the issue "We must do more to deal with unnecessary demand, such as by all of us doing more to cut our food waste".[121]

In June 2009, then-Environment Secretary Hilary Benn announced the Government's "War on waste", a programme aimed at reducing Britain's food waste. The proposed plans under the scheme included: scrapping best before and limiting sell by labels on food, creating new food packaging sizes, constructing more "on-the-go" recycling points and unveiling five flagship anaerobic digestion plants. Two years after its launch, the "Love Food, Hate Waste" campaign was claiming it had already prevented 137,000 tonnes of waste and, through the help it had given to over 2,000,000 households, had made savings of £300,000,000.

In the UK, 6,700,000 tonnes (6,590,000 long tons; 7,390,000 short tons) per year of wasted food (purchased and edible food which is discarded) amounts to a cost of £10.2 billion each year. This represents costs of £250 to £400 a year per household.[122]

United States edit

According to United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), between 30–40 percent of food in the U.S. is wasted.[123] Estimates of food waste in the United States range from 35 million tons to 103 million tons.[13] In a study done by National Geographic in 2014, Elizabeth Royte indicated more than 30 percent of food in the United States, valued at $162 billion annually, is not eaten.[124] The University of Arizona conducted a study in 2004 that indicated that 14% to 15% of United States edible food is untouched or unopened, amounting to $43 billion worth of discarded, but edible, food.[125] In 2010, the United States Department of Agriculture came forth with estimations from the Economic Research Service that approximates food waste in the United States to be equivalent to 141 trillion calories.[126]

USDA data from 2010 shows that 26% of fish, meat, and poultry were thrown away at the retail and consumer level. Since then, meat production has increased by more than 10%. Data scientist Harish Sethu says this means that billions of animals are raised and slaughtered only to end up in a landfill.[127]

Impact on the environment edit

 
Food waste is responsible for 6% of global greenhouse gas emissions

According to United Nations, about a third of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions is linked to food.[128] Empirical evidence at the global level on the environmental footprints for major commodity groups suggests that, if the aim is to reduce land use, the primary focus should be on meat and animal products, which account for 60 percent of the land footprint associated with food loss and waste.[12] If the aim is to target water scarcity, cereals and pulses make the largest contribution (more than 70 percent), followed by fruits and vegetables.[12] In terms of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions associated with food loss and waste, the biggest contribution is again from cereals and pulses (more than 60 percent), followed by roots, tubers and oil-bearing crops.[12] However, the environmental footprint for different commodities also varies across regions and countries, due, among other things, to differences in crop yields and production techniques.[12] According to the IPCC 6th Assessment Report, the reduction of food waste would be beneficial for improving availability of resources such as "water, land-use, energy consumption" and the overall reduction of greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere.[129]

Prevention and valorisation edit

 
 
Limiting food wastage has seen the adoption of former World War I and World War II slogans by antiwaste groups such as WRAP.[122]

In 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations adopted an agreement for preserving biodiversity, including a commitment to reduce food waste by 50% by the year 2030.[11]

According to FAO's The State of Food and Agriculture 2019, the case for reducing food loss and waste includes gains that society can reap but which individual actors may not take into account, namely: (i) increased productivity and economic growth; (ii) improved food security and nutrition; and (iii) mitigation of environmental impacts of losing and wasting food, in particular terms of reducing greenhouse gas (GHG emissions as well as lowering pressure on land and water resources. The last two societal gains, in particular, are typically seen as externalities of reducing food loss and waste.[130]

Response to the problem of food waste at all social levels has varied hugely, including campaigns from advisory and environmental groups,[131] and concentrated media attention on the subject.[122][132]

As suggested by the food waste hierarchy, prevention and reuse pathways for human consumption have the highest priority levels for food waste treatment. The general approach to food waste reduction comprise two main pathways: prevention and valorisation.[133] Prevention of food waste infers all actions that reduce food production and ultimately prevent food from being produced in vain, such as food donations or re-processing into new food products. Valorisation on the other hand comprise actions that recover the materials, nutrients or energy in food waste, for instance by producing animal feed, fuel or energy.

Multiple studies have studied the environmental benefits of food waste prevention measures, including food donations,[134] recovery of unharvested vegetables for re-use in food production,[135] re-processing of surplus bread for beer production,[136] and producing chutney or juice from leftovers.[137] Food waste can also be used to produce multiple high-value products, such as a fish oil substitute for food or feed use via marine micro algae,[138] without compromising the ability to produce energy via biogas. The general consensus currently suggest that reducing food waste by either prevention or valorisation, for human consumption, infers higher environmental benefits compared to the lower priority levels, such as energy production or disposal.

Multiple private enterprises have developed hardware and software solutions dealing mainly with the prevention of food waste within foodservice production facilities (contract catering, hotels & resorts, cruise ships, casinos etc.), by gathering quantitative and qualitative data about the specific food waste, helping chefs and managers reduce food waste by up to 70% by improving and optimising their workflows and menus.

Food rescue edit

There are multiple initiatives that rescue food that would otherwise not be consumed by humans anymore. The food can come from supermarkets, restaurants or private households for example. Such initiatives are:

Consumer marketing edit

One way of dealing with food waste is to reduce its creation. Consumers can reduce spoilage by planning their food shopping, avoiding potentially wasteful spontaneous purchases, and storing foods properly (and also preventing a too large buildup of perishable stock).[131] Widespread educational campaigns have been shown to be an effective way to reduce food waste.[139]

A British campaign called "Love Food, Hate Waste" has raised awareness about preventative measures to address food waste for consumers. Through advertisements, information on food storage and preparation and in-store education, the UK observed a 21% decrease in avoidable household food waste over the course of 5 years.[140]

Another potential solution is for "smart packaging" which would indicate when food is spoiled more precisely than expiration dates currently do, for example with temperature-sensitive ink,[141] plastic that changes color when exposed to oxygen,[142] or gels that change color with time.[143]

An initiative in Curitiba, Brazil, called Cambio Verde allows farmers to provide surplus produce (produce they would otherwise discard due to too low prices) to people that bring glass and metal to recycling facilities (to encourage further waste reduction).[144] In Europe, the Food Surplus Entrepreneurs Network (FSE Network), coordinates a network of social businesses and nonprofit initiatives with the goal to spread best practices to increase the use of surplus food and reduction of food waste.[145]

An overarching consensus exists on the substantial environmental benefits of food waste reduction.[146] However, rebound effects may cause substitutive consumption as a result of economic savings made from food waste prevention, potentially offsetting more than half of the avoided emissions (depending on the type of food and price elasticities involved).[147][148]

Collection edit

 
Bins of food waste in ReFood bins locked in a cage to prevent dumpster diving

In areas where the waste collection is a public function, food waste is usually managed by the same governmental organization as other waste collection. Most food waste is combined with general waste at the source. Separate collections, also known as source-separated organics, have the advantage that food waste can be disposed of in ways not applicable to other wastes. In the United States, companies find higher and better uses for large commercial generators of food and beverage waste.

From the end of the 19th century through the middle of the 20th century, many municipalities collected food waste (called "garbage" as opposed to "trash") separately. This was typically disinfected by steaming and fed to pigs, either on private farms or in municipal piggeries.[149]

Separate curbside collection of food waste is now being revived in some areas. To keep collection costs down and raise the rate of food waste segregation, some local authorities, especially in Europe, have introduced "alternate weekly collections" of biodegradable waste (including, e.g., garden waste), which enable a wider range of recyclable materials to be collected at reasonable cost, and improve their collection rates. However, they result in a two-week wait before the waste will be collected. The criticism is that particularly during hot weather, food waste rots and stinks, and attracts vermin. Waste container design is therefore essential to making such operations feasible. Curbside collection of food waste is also done in the U.S., some ways by combining food scraps and yard waste together. Several states in the U.S. have introduced a yard waste ban, not accepting leaves, brush, trimmings, etc. in landfills. Collection of food scraps and yard waste combined is then recycled and composted for reuse.

Disposal edit

As alternatives to landfill, food waste can be composted to produce soil and fertilizer, fed to animals or insects, or used to produce energy or fuel. Some wasted fruit parts, can also be biorefined to extract useful substances for the industry (i.e. succinic acid from orange peels, lycopene from tomato peels).

Landfills and greenhouse gases edit

Dumping food waste in a landfill causes odour as it decomposes, attracts flies and vermin, and has the potential to add biological oxygen demand (BOD) to the leachate. The European Union Landfill Directive and Waste Regulations, like regulations in other countries,[which?] enjoin diverting organic wastes away from landfill disposal for these reasons. Starting in 2015, organic waste from New York City restaurants will be banned from landfills.[150]

In countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom, food scraps constitute around 19% of the waste buried in landfills, where it biodegrades very easily and produces methane, a powerful greenhouse gas.[151]

Methane, or CH4, is the second most prevalent greenhouse gas that is released into the air, also produced by landfills in the U.S. Although methane spends less time in the atmosphere (12 years) than CO2, it is more efficient at trapping radiation. It is 25 times greater to impact climate change than CO2 in a 100-year period. Humans accounts over 60% of methane emissions globally.[152]

Fodder and insect feed edit

Large quantities of fish, meat, dairy and grain are discarded at a global scale annually, when they can be used for things other than human consumption. The feeding of food scraps or slop to domesticated animals such as pigs or chickens is, historically, the most common way of dealing with household food waste. The animals turn roughly two thirds of their ingested food into gas or fecal waste, while the last third is digested and repurposed as meat or dairy products. There are also different ways of growing produce and feeding livestock that could ultimately reduce waste.

Bread and other cereal products discarded from the human food chain could be used to feed chickens. Chickens have traditionally been given mixtures of waste grains and milling by-products in a mixture called chicken scratch. As well, giving table scraps to backyard chickens is a large part of that movement's claim to sustainability, though not all backyard chicken growers recommend it.[153] Ruminants and pigs have also been fed bakery waste for a long time.[154]

Certain food waste (such as flesh) can also be used as feed in maggot farming.[155] The maggots can then be fed to other animals. In China, some food waste is being processed by feeding it to cockroaches.[156]

Composting edit

 
Inevitable waste: peels of potato, onion, lemon, tangerine, banana, kiwi, egg shell

Food waste can be biodegraded by composting, and reused to fertilize soil. Composting is the aerobic process completed by microorganisms in which the bacteria break down the food waste into simpler organic materials that can then be used in soil.[157] By redistributing nutrients and high microbial populations, compost reduces water runoff and soil erosion by enhancing rainfall penetration, which has been shown to reduce the loss of sediment, nutrients, and pesticide losses to streams by 75–95%.[158]

Composting food waste leads to a decrease in the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere. In landfills, organic food waste decomposes anaerobically, producing methane gas that is emitted into the atmosphere. When this biodegradable waste is composted, it decomposes aerobically and does not produce methane, but instead produces organic compost that can then be utilized in agriculture.[159] Recently, the city of New York has begun to require that restaurants and food-producing companies begin to compost their leftover food.[160] Another instance of composting progress is a Wisconsin-based company called WasteCap, who is dedicated towards aiding local communities create composting plans.[161]

Municipal Food Waste (MFW) can be composted to create this product of organic fertilizer, and many municipalities choose to do this citing environmental protection and economic efficiency as reasoning. Transporting and dumping waste in landfills requires both money and room in the landfills that have very limited available space.[162] One municipality who chose to regulate MFW is San Francisco, who requires citizens to separate compost from trash on their own, instituting fines for non-compliance at $100 for individual homes and $500 for businesses. The city's economic reasoning for this controversial mandate is supported by their estimate that one business can save up to $30,000 annually on garbage disposal costs with the implementation of the required composting.[159]

Home composting edit

Composting is an economical and environmentally conscious step many homeowners could take to reduce their impact on landfill waste. Instead of food scraps and spoiled food taking up space in trashcans or stinking up the kitchen before the bag is full, it could be put outside and broken down by worms and added to garden beds.

Anaerobic digestion edit

Anaerobic digestion produces both useful gaseous products and a solid fibrous "compostable" material. Anaerobic digestion plants can provide energy from waste by burning the methane created from food and other organic wastes to generate electricity, defraying the plants' costs and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The United States Environmental Protection Agency states that the use of anaerobic composting allows for large amounts of food waste to avoid the landfills. Instead of producing these greenhouse gasses into the environment from being in a landfill, the gasses can alternatively be harnessed in these facilities for reuse.[163]

Since this process of composting produces high volumes of biogas, there are potential safety issues such as explosion and poisoning.[164] These interactions require proper maintenance and personal protective equipment is utilized.[165] Certain U.S. states, such as Oregon, have implemented the requirement for permits on such facilities, based on the potential danger to the population and surrounding environment.[166]

Food waste coming through the sanitary sewers from garbage disposal units is treated along with other sewage and contributes to sludge.

Commercial liquid food waste edit

Commercially, food waste in the form of wastewater coming from commercial kitchens' sinks, dishwashers and floor drains is collected in holding tanks called grease interceptors to minimize flow to the sewer system. This often foul-smelling waste contains both organic and inorganic waste (chemical cleaners, etc.) and may also contain hazardous hydrogen sulfide gases. It is referred to as fats, oils, and grease (FOG) waste or more commonly "brown grease" (versus "yellow grease", which is fryer oil that is easily collected and processed into biodiesel) and is an overwhelming problem, especially in the US, for the aging sewer systems. Per the US EPA, sanitary sewer overflows also occur due to the improper discharge of FOGs to the collection system.[167] Overflows discharge 3–10 billion U.S. gallons (11–38 million cubic meters) of untreated wastewater annually into local waterways, and up to 3,700 illnesses annually are due to exposure to contamination from sanitary sewer overflows into recreational waters.[168]

See also edit

Sources edit

  This article incorporates text from a free content work. Licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0 (license statement/permission). Text taken from The State of Food and Agriculture 2019. Moving forward on food loss and waste reduction, In brief​, 24, FAO, FAO.

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Further reading edit

  • Porpino, Gustavo (2016). "Household Food Waste Behavior: Avenues for Future Research". Journal of the Association for Consumer Research. 1 (1): 41–51. doi:10.1086/684528. S2CID 56005307.
  • Baylen J. Linnekin (2016). Biting the Hands that Feed Us: How Fewer, Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable. Island Press. ISBN 978-1610916752.

External links edit

  • NRDC page on food waste (advocacy site with suggestions)
  • Reduced Food Waste - Solution Summary Project Drawdown, 2020.
  • Food Waste and Rescue Report in Israel
  • Wasting Nothing, Project Regeneration, 2021.

food, loss, waste, food, that, eaten, causes, food, waste, loss, numerous, occur, throughout, food, system, during, production, processing, distribution, retail, food, service, sales, consumption, overall, about, third, world, food, thrown, away, 2021, meta, a. Food loss and waste is food that is not eaten The causes of food waste or loss are numerous and occur throughout the food system during production processing distribution retail and food service sales and consumption Overall about one third of the world s food is thrown away 2 3 A 2021 meta analysis that did not include food lost during production by the United Nations Environment Programme found that food waste was a challenge in all countries at all levels of economic development 4 The analysis estimated that global food waste was 931 million tonnes of food waste about 121 kg per capita across three sectors 61 percent from households 26 percent from food service and 13 percent from retail 4 Fruit and vegetables in a dumpster discarded uneatenFood recovered by food waste critic Robin Greenfield in Madison Wisconsin from two days of recovery from dumpsters 1 Food loss and waste is a major part of the impact of agriculture on climate change it amounts to 3 3 billion tons of CO2e emissions annually 5 6 and other environmental issues such as land use water use and loss of biodiversity Prevention of food waste is the highest priority and when prevention is not possible the food waste hierarchy ranks the food waste treatment options from preferred to least preferred based on their negative environmental impacts 7 Reuse pathways of surplus food intended for human consumption such as food donation is the next best strategy after prevention followed by animal feed recycling of nutrients and energy followed by the least preferred option landfill which is a major source of the greenhouse gas methane 8 Other considerations include unreclaimed phosphorus in food waste leading to further phosphate mining Moreover reducing food waste in all parts of the food system is an important part of reducing the environmental impact of agriculture by reducing the total amount of water land and other resources used The UN s Sustainable Development Goal Target 12 3 seeks to halve global per capita food waste at the retail and consumer levels and reduce food losses along production and supply chains including post harvest losses by 2030 9 Climate change mitigation strategies prominently feature reducing food waste 10 failed verification In the 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations agree to reduce food waste by 50 by the year 2030 11 Contents 1 Definition 1 1 United Nations 1 2 European Union 1 3 United States 1 4 Other definitions 1 5 Methodology 2 Sources 2 1 Production 2 2 Food processing 2 3 Retail 2 4 Food service industry 2 5 Consumption 2 6 By sector 2 6 1 Fruit and vegetables 2 6 2 Grains 3 Extent 3 1 Global extent 3 1 1 Earlier estimates 3 2 Individual countries 3 2 1 Australia 3 2 2 Canada 3 2 3 China 3 2 4 Denmark 3 2 5 France 3 2 6 Hungary 3 2 7 Italy 3 2 8 Netherlands 3 2 9 New Zealand 3 2 10 Singapore 3 2 11 United Kingdom 3 2 12 United States 4 Impact on the environment 5 Prevention and valorisation 5 1 Food rescue 5 2 Consumer marketing 6 Collection 7 Disposal 7 1 Landfills and greenhouse gases 7 2 Fodder and insect feed 7 3 Composting 7 3 1 Home composting 7 4 Anaerobic digestion 7 5 Commercial liquid food waste 8 See also 9 Sources 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksDefinition edit nbsp A conceptual framework for food loss and waste FLW 12 Food loss and waste occurs at all stages of the food supply chain production processing sales and consumption 13 12 Definitions of what constitutes food loss versus food waste or what parts of foods i e inedible parts exit the food supply chain are considered lost or wasted vary 12 Terms are often defined on a situational basis as is the case more generally with definitions of waste 13 14 Professional bodies including international organizations state governments and secretariats may use their own definitions 15 United Nations edit The Food and Agriculture Organization FAO of the United Nations defines food loss and waste as the decrease in quantity or quality of food along the food supply chain Within this framework UN Agencies distinguish loss and waste at two different stages in the process 16 Food loss occurs along the food supply chain from harvest slaughter catch up to but not including the sales level Food waste occurs at the retail and consumption level Important components of this definition include 12 Food redirected to nonfood chains including animal feed compost or recovery to bioenergy is not counted as food loss or waste Inedible parts are not considered as food loss or waste these inedible parts are sometimes referred to as unavoidable food waste 12 Under Sustainable Development Goal 12 the Food and Agriculture Organization is responsible for measuring food loss while the UN Environmental Program measures food waste 17 European Union edit nbsp Protest against food waste Berlin GermanyIn the European Union EU food waste is defined by combining the definitions of food and waste namely any substance or product whether processed partially processed or unprocessed intended to be or reasonably expected to be ingested by humans including things such as drinks and chewing gum excluding things such as feed medicine cosmetics tobacco products and narcotic or psychotropic substances which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard 18 2 3 Previously food waste was defined by directive 75 442 EEC as any food substance raw or cooked which is discarded or intended or required to be discarded in 1975 19 In 2006 75 442 EEC was repealed by 2006 12 EC 19 which defined waste as any substance or object in the categories set out in Annex I which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard 20 Meanwhile Article 2 of Regulation EC No 178 2002 the General Food Law Regulation as amended on 1 July 2022 defined food as any substance or product whether processed partially processed or unprocessed intended to be or reasonably expected to be ingested by humans including things such as drinks and chewing gum excluding things such as feed medicine cosmetics tobacco products and narcotic or psychotropic substances 21 A 2016 European Court of Auditors special report had criticised the lack of a common definition of food waste as hampering progress and a May 2017 resolution by the European Parliament supported a legally binding definition of food waste 18 4 6 Finally the 2018 851 EU directive of 30 May 2018 the revised Waste Framework Directive combined the two after waste was redefined in 2008 by Article 3 1 of 2008 98 EC as any substance or object which the holder discards or intends or is required to discard 22 by defining food waste as all food as defined in Article 2 of Regulation EC No 178 2002 of the European Parliament and of the Council that has become waste 18 2 3 United States edit nbsp Food waste alternative As of 2022 the United States Environmental Protection Agency EPA employed three categories 23 Excess food refers to food that is recovered and donated to feed people Food waste refers to food such as plate waste i e food that has been served but not eaten spoiled food or peels and rinds considered inedible that is sent to feed animals to be composted or anaerobically digested or to be landfilled or combusted with energy recovery Food loss refers to unused product from the agricultural sector such as unharvested crops In 2006 the EPA defined food waste as uneaten food and food preparation wastes from residences and commercial establishments such as grocery stores restaurants produce stands institutional cafeterias and kitchens and industrial sources like employee lunchrooms 24 The states remain free to define food waste differently for their purposes 25 26 though as of 2009 many had not done so 27 Other definitions edit Bellemare et al 2017 compared four definitions from 13 4 a Food and Agriculture Organization FAO 2016 report Food loss is defined as the decrease in quantity or quality of food Food waste is part of food loss and refers to discarding or alternative nonfood use of food that is safe and nutritious for human consumption along the entire food supply chain from primary production to end household consumer level an Economic Research Service ERS a USDA agency 2014 report Food loss represents the amount of food postharvest that is available for human consumption but is not consumed for any reason It includes cooking loss and natural shrinkage for example moisture loss loss from mould pests or inadequate climate control and food waste Food waste is a component of food loss and occurs when an edible item goes unconsumed as in food discarded by retailers due to color or appearance and plate waste by consumers a FUSIONS an EU project 2016 report Food waste is any food and inedible parts of food removed from the food supply chain to be recovered or disposed including composed sic crops ploughed in not harvested anaerobic digestion bioenergy production co generation incineration disposal to sewer landfill or discarded to sea and an EPA 2016 report The amount of food going to landfills from residences commercial establishments e g grocery stores and restaurants institutional sources e g school cafeterias and industrial sources e g factory lunchrooms Pre consumer food generated during the manufacturing and packaging of food products is not included in EPA s food waste estimates According to Bellemare et al the inclusion of food that goes to nonfood productive use is flawed for two reasons First if recovered food is used as an input such as animal feed fertilizer or biomass to produce output then by definition it is not wasted However there might be economic losses if the cost of recovered food is higher than the average cost of inputs in the alternative nonfood use Second the definition creates practical problems for measuring food waste because the measurement requires tracking food loss in every stage of the supply chain and its proportion that flows to nonfood uses 13 4 They argued that only food that ends up in landfills should be counted as food waste pointing to the 2016 EPA definition as a good example 13 4 Bellemare et al also noted that the FAO and ERS definitions only apply to edible and safe and nutritious food whereas the definitions of FUSIONS and the EPA apply to both edible and inedible parts of food Finally the ERS and EPA definitions of food waste exclude the food that is not harvested at the farm level 13 4 A 2019 FAO report stated The notion of food being lost or wasted is deceptively simple but in practice there is no commonly agreed definition of food loss and waste FAO has worked towards the harmonization of concepts related to food loss and waste and the definitions adopted in this report are the result of a consensus reached in consultation with experts in this field This report understands food loss and waste as the decrease in quantity or quality of food along the food supply chain Empirically it considers food losses as occurring along the food supply chain from harvest slaughter catch up to but not including the retail level Food waste on the other hand occurs at the retail and consumption level This definition also aligns with the distinction implicit in SDG Target 12 3 This report also asserts that although there may be an economic loss food diverted to other economic uses such as animal feed is not considered as quantitative food loss or waste Similarly inedible parts are not considered as food loss or waste 12 9 10 Methodology edit The 2019 FAO report stated Food loss and waste has typically been measured in physical terms using tonnes as reporting units This measurement fails to account for the economic value of different commodities and can risk attributing a higher weight to low value products just because they are heavier This report acknowledges this by adopting a measure that accounts for the economic value of produce 12 10 Hall et al 2009 calculated food waste in the United States in terms of energy value by comparing the US food supply data with the calculated food consumed by the US population The result was that food waste among American consumers increased from about 30 of the available food supply in 1974 to almost 40 in recent years the early 2000s or about 900 kcal per person per day 1974 to about 1400 kcal per person per day 2003 28 A 2012 Natural Resources Defense Council report interpreted this to mean that Americans threw away up to 40 of food that was safe to eat 29 Buzby amp Hyman 2012 estimated both the total weight in kg and lbs and monetary value in USD of food loss in the United States concluding that the annual value of food loss is almost 10 of the average amount spent on food per consumer in 2008 30 Sources edit nbsp Production edit In the United States food loss can occur at most stages of the food industry and in significant amounts 31 In subsistence agriculture the amounts of food loss are unknown but are likely to be insignificant by comparison due to the limited stages at which loss can occur and given that food is grown for projected need as opposed to a global marketplace demand 32 33 Nevertheless on farm losses in storage in developing countries particularly in African countries can be high although the exact nature of such losses is much debated 34 In the food industry of the United States the food supply of which is the most diverse and abundant of any country in the world loss occurs from the beginning of food production chain 31 From planting crops can be subjected to pest infestations and severe weather 35 36 which cause losses before harvest 31 Since natural forces e g temperature and precipitation remain the primary drivers of crop growth losses from these can be experienced by all forms of outdoor agriculture 37 On average farms in the United States lose up to six billion pounds of crops every year because of these unpredictable conditions 38 According to the IPCC sixth assessment report encouraging the development of technologies that address issues in food harvesting and post harvesting could have a significant impact on decreasing food waste in the supply chain early on 39 The use of machinery in harvesting can cause loss as harvesters may be unable to discern between ripe and immature crops or collect only part of a crop 31 Economic factors such as regulations and standards for quality and appearance 40 also cause food waste farmers often harvest selectively preferring to leave crops not to standard in the field where they can be used as fertilizer or animal feed since they would otherwise be discarded later 31 This method of removing undesirable produce from harvest collection distribution sites and grocery stores is called culling 41 However usually when culling occurs at the production food processing retail and consumption stages it is to remove or dispose of produce with a strange or imperfect appearance rather than produce that is spoiled or unsafe to eat 42 In urban areas fruit and nut trees often go unharvested because people either do not realize that the fruit is edible or they fear that it is contaminated despite research which shows that urban fruit is safe to consume 43 Food processing edit Food loss continues in the post harvest stage but the amounts of post harvest loss involved are relatively unknown and difficult to estimate 44 1 Regardless the variety of factors that contribute to food loss both biological environmental and socio economical would limit the usefulness and reliability of general figures 44 1 7 8 In storage considerable quantitative losses can be attributed to pests and micro organisms 45 46 This is a particular problem for countries that experience a combination of heat around 30 C and ambient humidity between 70 and 90 per cent as such conditions encourage the reproduction of insect pests and micro organisms 47 Losses in the nutritional value caloric value and edibility of crops by extremes of temperature humidity or the action of micro organisms 48 also account for food waste 49 Further losses are generated in the handling of food and by shrinkage in weight or volume 31 Some of the food loss produced by processing can be difficult to reduce without affecting the quality of the finished product 15 3 Food safety regulations are able to claim foods that contradict standards before they reach markets 31 Although this can conflict with efforts to reuse food loss such as in animal feed 50 safety regulations are in place to ensure the health of the consumer they are vitally important especially in the processing of foodstuffs of animal origin e g meat and dairy products as contaminated products from these sources can lead to and are associated with microbiological and chemical hazards 51 52 Retail edit nbsp Discarded bagelsPackaging protects food from damage during its transportation from farms and factories via warehouses to retailing as well as preserving its freshness upon arrival 53 Although it avoids considerable food waste 53 54 packaging can compromise efforts to reduce food waste in other ways such as by contaminating waste that could be used for animal feedstocks with plastics 55 In 2013 the nonprofit Natural Resources Defense Council NRDC performed research that suggests that the leading cause of food waste in America is due to uncertainty over food expiration dates such as confusion in deciphering best before sell by or use by dates 56 Joined by Harvard s Food Law and Policy Clinic the NRDC produced a study called The Dating Game How Confusing Food Date Labels Leads to Food Waste in America 57 This United States based study looked at the intertwining laws which lead labeling to end up unclear and erratic 58 This uncertainty leads to consumers to toss food most often because they think the food may be unsafe or misunderstand the labeling on the food completely Lack of regulation on labeling can result in large quantities of food being removed from the market overall 56 Retail stores throw away large quantities of food Usually this consists of items that have reached either their best before sell by or use by dates Some stores make an effort to markdown these goods with systems like discount stickers stores have widely varying policies to handle the excess food Much of the food discarded by stores is still edible Some stores put effort into preventing access to poor or homeless people while others work with charitable organization to distribute food Retailers also contribute to waste as a result of their contractual arrangements with suppliers Failure to supply agreed quantities renders farmers or processors liable to have their contracts cancelled As a consequence they plan to produce more than actually required to meet the contract to have a margin of error Surplus production is often simply disposed of 59 Retailers usually have strict cosmetic standards for produce and if fruits or vegetables are misshapen or superficially bruised they are often not put on the shelf In the United States some of the estimated six billion pounds of produce wasted each year are discarded because of appearance 60 The USDA publishes guidelines used as a baseline assessment by produce distributors grocery stores restaurants and other consumers in order to rate the quality of food 61 These guidelines and how they rate are readily available on their website For example apples get graded by their size color wax residue firmness and skin appearance If apples rank highly in these categories and show close to no superficial defects they are rated as U S Extra Fancy or U S Fancy these are the typical ratings sought out by grocery stores when purchasing their produce 62 Any apples with suboptimal levels of appearance are ranked as either U S Number 1 or Utility and are not normally purchased for retail as recommended by produce marketing sources despite being safe and edible 62 63 A number of regional programs and organizations have been established by the EPA and USDA in an attempt to reduce such produce waste 64 65 Organizations in other countries such as Good amp Fugly in Australia and No Food Waste in India are making similar efforts worldwide 66 67 The popular trend of selling imperfect produce at retail has been criticized for overlooking existing markets for these foods eg the food processing industry and bargain grocery stores and downplaying the household level wasting of food that is statistically a larger part of the overall problem 68 The fishing industry wastes substantial amounts of food about 40 60 of fish caught in Europe is discarded as the wrong size or wrong species This comes to about 2 3 million tonnes per annum in the North Atlantic and the North Sea 59 Food service industry edit nbsp Lunch leftovers in a restaurant in SeoulAddressing food waste requires involving multiple stakeholders throughout the food supply chain which is a market driven system Each stakeholder and their food waste quantification can be dependent on geographical scales 69 This geographical scale then results in the production of different definitions of food waste as mentioned earlier with respect to the complexities of food supply chains and then create a narrative that further shows the needs for specific research on important stakeholders 69 The food service industry suggests to be a key stakeholder to achieve mitigation 70 The key players within the food service industry include the manufacturers producers farmers managers employees and consumers The key factors relating to food waste in restaurants include the food menu the production procedure the use of pre prepared versus whole food products dinnerware size type of ingredients used the dishes served opening hours and disposal methods 71 These factors then can be categorized in the different stages of operations that relate to pre kitchen kitchen based and post kitchen processes 72 In restaurants in developing countries the lack of infrastructure and associated technical and managerial skills in food production have been identified as the key drivers in the creation of food waste currently and in the future 69 Comparatively the majority of food waste in developed countries tends to be produced post consumer which is driven by the low prices of food greater disposable income consumers high expectations of food cosmetic standards and the increasing disconnect between consumers and how food is being produced Urbanization 69 That being said in United States restaurants alone an estimated 22 to 33 billion pounds are wasted each year 73 Serving plate size reduction has been identified as an intervention effective at reducing restaurant food waste 74 Under such interventions restaurants decrease the size of plates for meals provided to diners Similar interventions which have been found to be effective at reducing restaurant food waste include utilizing reusable rather than disposable plates and decreasing serving size 74 Consumption edit Consumers are directly and indirectly responsible for wasting a lot of food which could for a large part be avoided if they were willing to accept suboptimal food SOF that deviates in sensory characteristics odd shapes discolorations or has a best before date that is approaching or has passed but is still perfectly fine to eat 75 In addition to inedible and edible food waste generated by consumers substantial amounts of food is wasted through food overconsumption also referred to as metabolic food waste 76 77 78 79 estimated globally as 10 of foods reaching the consumer 80 Several interventions have been designed to achieve food waste reduction at the consumer level such as reducing portion size and changing plates However despite being practical to some extent these interventions can result in unintended consequences due to the lack of understanding of underlying causes and what influences consumers to act on specific behaviors Unintended consequences for example could be prioritizing unhealthy food at the expense of healthy food or reduced consumption and calorie intake in general 81 By sector edit Fruit and vegetables edit This section is an excerpt from Post harvest losses vegetables edit nbsp Discarded tomatoes on a compost heap at nurseries in the UKPost harvest losses of vegetables and fruit occur at all points in the value chain from production in the field to the food being placed on a plate for consumption Post harvest activities include harvesting handling storage processing packaging transportation and marketing 82 Losses of horticultural produce are a major problem in the post harvest chain They can be caused by a wide variety of factors ranging from growing conditions to handling at retail level Not only are losses clearly a waste of food but they also represent a similar waste of human effort farm inputs livelihoods investments and scarce resources such as water 83 Post harvest losses for horticultural produce are however difficult to measure In some cases everything harvested by a farmer may end up being sold to consumers In others losses or waste may be considerable Occasionally losses may be 100 for example when there is a price collapse and it would cost the farmer more to harvest and market the produce than to plough it back into the ground Use of average loss figures is thus often misleading There can be losses in quality as measured both by the price obtained and the nutritional value as well as in quantity Grains edit This section is an excerpt from Post harvest losses grains edit nbsp Grain silos in AustraliaGrains may be lost in the pre harvest harvest and post harvest stages Pre harvest losses occur before the process of harvesting begins and may be due to insects weeds and rusts Harvest losses occur between the beginning and completion of harvesting and are primarily caused by losses due to shattering Post harvest losses occur between harvest and the moment of human consumption They include on farm losses such as when grain is threshed winnowed and dried Other on farm losses include inadequate harvesting time climatic conditions practices applied at harvest and handling and challenges in marketing produce Significant losses are caused by inadequate storage conditions as well as decisions made at earlier stages of the supply chain including transportation storage and processing which predispose products to a shorter shelf life 84 Important in many developing countries particularly in Africa are on farm losses during storage when the grain is being stored for auto consumption or while the farmer awaits a selling opportunity or a rise in prices Extent edit nbsp Food loss from post harvest to distribution in 2016 percentages globally and by region 12 nbsp Food waste infographic produced by Next Generation Food 2010Global extent edit Efforts are underway by the Food and Agriculture Organization FAO and the United Nations Environment Programme UNEP to measure progress towards SDG Target 12 3 through two separate indices the Food Loss Index FLI and the Food Waste Index FWI 85 According to FAO s The State of Food and Agriculture 2019 globally in 2016 around 14 percent of the world s food is lost from production before reaching the retail level Generally levels of loss are higher for fruits and vegetables than for cereals and pulses However even for the latter significant levels are found in sub Saharan Africa and Eastern and South Eastern Asia while they are limited in Central and Southern Asia 12 Estimates from UN Environment s Food Waste Index suggest that about 931 million tonnes of food or 17 percent of total food available to consumers in 2019 went into the waste bins of households retailers restaurants and other food services 4 According to a report from Feedback EU the EU wastes 153 million tonnes of food each year around double previous estimates 86 Earlier estimates edit In 2011 an FAO publication based on studies carried out by The Swedish Institute for Food and Biotechnology SIK found that the total of global amount of food loss and waste was around one third of the edible parts of food produced for human consumption amounting to about 1 3 billion tonnes 1 28 109 long tons 1 43 109 short tons per year 42 4 As the following table shows industrialized and developing countries differ substantially In developing countries it is estimated that 400 500 calories per day per person are wasted while in developed countries 1 500 calories per day per person are wasted 87 In the former more than 40 of losses occur at the post harvest and processing stages while in the latter more than 40 of losses occur at the retail and consumer levels The total food waste by consumers in industrialized countries 222 million tonnes or 218 000 000 long tons or 245 000 000 short tons is almost equal to the entire food production in sub Saharan Africa 230 million tonnes or 226 000 000 long tons or 254 000 000 short tons 42 4 Food loss and waste per person per year 2007 42 5 Total At the production and retail stages By consumersEurope 280 kg 617 lb 190 kg 419 lb 90 kg 198 lb North America and Oceania 295 kg 650 lb 185 kg 408 lb 110 kg 243 lb Industrialized Asia 240 kg 529 lb 160 kg 353 lb 80 kg 176 lb sub Saharan Africa 160 kg 353 lb 155 kg 342 lb 5 kg 11 lb North Africa West and Central Asia 215 kg 474 lb 180 kg 397 lb 35 kg 77 lb South and Southeast Asia 125 kg 276 lb 110 kg 243 lb 15 kg 33 lb Latin America 225 kg 496 lb 200 kg 441 lb 25 kg 55 lb A 2013 report from the British Institution of Mechanical Engineers IME likewise estimated that 30 50 or 1 2 2 billion tonnes or 1 18 109 1 97 109 long tons or 1 32 109 2 20 109 short tons of all food produced remains uneaten 88 Individual countries edit Australia edit Each year in New South Wales more than 25 million meals are delivered by charity OzHarvest from food that would otherwise be wasted 89 Each year the Australian economy loses 20 billion in food waste This has a crucial environmental impact through the waste of resources used to produce manufacture package and distribute that food 90 In addition it is estimated that 7 6 million tonnes of CO2 is generated by the disposed food in landfills It is also the cause of odour leaching and potential generation for diseases In March 2019 the Australian ministry of the environment shared the key findings of Australia s National food waste baseline which will facilitate the tracking of the progress towards their goal to halve Australian food waste by 2030 91 Many initiatives were taken by the Australian government in order to help achieve this goal In fact they financed 1 2 million in organization that invest in renewable energies systems to store and transport food They also funded more than 10 million for research on food waste reduction Local governments have also implemented programs such as information sessions on storing food and composting diversion of waste from restaurants and cafes from landfills to shared recycling facilities and donation of food to organization that would otherwise be wasted Canada edit In Canada 58 of all food is wasted amounting to 35 5 million tonnes of food per annuum 92 The value of this lost food is equivalent to CA 21 billion Such quantities of food would be enough to feed all Canadians for five months It is estimated that about one third of this waste could be spared and sent to those in need 92 There are many factors that contribute to such large scale waste Manufacturing and processing food alone incur costs of CA 21 billion or 4 82 million tons Per household it is estimated that 1 766 is lost in food loss and waste 92 The Government of Canada identifies three main factors contributing to household waste 1 buying too much food and not eating it before it spoils 2 malfunctioning or poorly designed packaging that does not deter spoilage rates or contamination and 3 improper disposing of food using garbage bins instead of those intended for organic waste Canada Mexico and the United States are working together under the Commission for Environmental Cooperation in order to address the severe problem of food waste in North America 93 Canada specifically is working in the following ways to reduce food waste Canada pledged to consult on strategies in the Strategy on Short lived Climate Pollutants to reduce avoidable food waste within the country This will help to reduce methane emissions from Canadian landfills The government has implemented a Food Policy for Canada Archived 2020 09 29 at the Wayback Machine which is a movement towards a more sustainable food system In February 2019 the government brought together several experts from different sectors to share ideas and discuss opportunities for measuring and reducing food loss and waste across the food supply chain During the 2022 Quebec general election Quebec solidaire party spokesman Gabriel Nadeau Dubois stated that ending food waste in Quebec would be a priority of the party if in government The party seeks to cut food waste by 50 by mandating large businesses and institutions to give unsold food to groups that would distribute the food or to businesses that would process the food 94 China edit In 2015 the Chinese Academy of Sciences reported that in big cities there was 17 to 18 million tons of food waste enough to feed over 30 million people About 25 of the waste was staple foods and about 18 meat 95 In August 2020 the Chinese Communist Party general secretary Xi Jinping said the amount of food waste was shocking and distressing A local authority campaign Operation empty plate Chinese 光盘行动 was started to reduce waste including encouraging food outlets to limit orders to one fewer main dish than the number of customers 95 As of December 2020 a draft law is under consideration to penalise food outlets if they encourage or mislead customers to order excessive meals causing obvious waste first with a warning and then fines of up to 10 000 yuan It would allow restaurants to charge customers who leave excessive leftovers Broadcasters who promote overeating or food waste could also be fined up to 100 000 yuan 95 Denmark edit According to Ministry of Environment Denmark over 700 000 tonnes per year of food is wasted every year in Denmark in the entire food value chain from farm to fork 96 Due to the work of activist Selina Juul s Stop Wasting Food movement Denmark has achieved a national reduction in food waste by 25 in 5 years 2010 2015 97 98 99 100 101 102 France edit nbsp Food wasteIn France approximately 1 3 1 9 million tonnes of food waste is produced every year or between 20 and 30 kilograms per person per year 103 Out of the 10 million tonnes of food that is either lost or wasted in the country 7 1 million tonnes of food wasted in the country only 11 comes from supermarkets 104 Not only does this cost the French 16 billion per year but also the negative impact on the environment is also shocking In France food waste emits 15 3 million tonnes of CO2 which represents 3 of the country s total CO2 emission 105 In response to this issue in 2016 France became the first country in the world to pass a unanimous legislation that bans supermarkets from throwing away or destroying unsold food Instead supermarkets are expected to donate such food to charities and food banks 106 In addition to donating food many businesses claim to prevent food waste by selling soon to be wasted products at discounted prices The National Pact Against Food Waste in France has outlined eleven measures to achieve a food waste reduction by half by 2025 107 Hungary edit According to the research of National Food Chain Safety Office in 2019 based on the official EU methodological framework an average Hungarian consumer generates 68 kg food waste annually 49 of this amount would be avoidable 108 The research team Wasteless project 109 replicated the study in 2019 involving 165 households 110 According to the data food waste generated by the Hungarian households was estimated to be 65 5 kg per capita annually Between the two periods a 4 decrease was observed despite significant economic expansion In 2021 The Fidesz government of Viktor Orban passed a law dealing with food waste 111 112 Italy edit According to REDUCE project which produced the first baseline dataset for Italy based on official EU methodological framework food waste is 530 g per person per week at household stage only edible fraction food waste in school canteens corresponds to 586 g per pupil per week retail food waste per capita per year corresponds to 2 9 kg See 2 Netherlands edit According to Meeusen amp Hagelaar 2008 between 30 and 50 of all food produced was estimated to be lost or thrown away at that time in the Netherlands while a 2010 Agriculture Ministry LNV report stated that the Dutch population wasted at least 9 5m tonnes of food per year worth at least 4 4bn 113 15 In 2019 three studies into food waste in households in the Netherlands commissioned by the LNV were conducted showing that the average household waste per capita had been reduced from 48 kilograms of solid food including dairy products fats sauces and soups in 2010 to 41 2 kilograms in 2016 to 34 3 kilograms in 2019 114 3 4 The waste of liquid foods excluding beer and wine first measured in 2019 that ended up in the sewer through sinks or toilets was analysed to have decreased from 57 3 litres per capita in 2010 to 45 5 litres in 2019 114 3 4 7 New Zealand edit This section is an excerpt from Food waste in New Zealand edit Food waste in New Zealand is one of the many environmental issues that is being addressed by industry individuals and government The total volume of food wasted in New Zealand is not known as food waste has not been investigated at all stages of the supply chain However research has been undertaken into household food waste supermarket food waste and hospitality sector food waste The Environment Select Committee held a briefing into foodwaste in 2018 Research done on household food waste in New Zealand found that larger households and households with more young people created more food waste The average household in this case study put 40 of food waste into the rubbish 115 Singapore edit In Singapore 788 600 tonnes 776 100 long tons 869 300 short tons of food was wasted in 2014 116 Of that 101 400 tonnes 99 800 long tons 111 800 short tons were recycled 117 Since Singapore has limited agriculture ability the country spent about S 14 8 billion US 10 6 billion on importing food in 2014 US 1 4 billion of it ends up being wasted or 13 percent 118 On January 1 2020 Singapore implemented the Zero Waste Masterplan which aims to reduce Singapore s daily waste production by 30 percent The project also aims to extend the lifespan of the Semaku Landfill Singapore s only landfill beyond 2025 119 As a direct result of the project food waste dropped to 665 000 tonnes showing a significant decrease from 2017 s all time high of 810 000 tonnes 120 United Kingdom edit This section is an excerpt from Food waste in the United Kingdom edit nbsp Food waste in the United Kingdom is a subject of environmental and socioeconomic concern that has received widespread media coverage and been met with varying responses from government Since 1915 food waste has been identified as a considerable problem and has been the subject of ongoing media attention intensifying with the launch of the Love Food Hate Waste campaign in 2007 Food waste has been discussed in newspaper articles news reports and television programmes which have increased awareness of it as a public issue To tackle waste issues encompassing food waste the government funded Waste amp Resources Action Programme WRAP was created in 2000 A significant proportion of food waste is produced by the domestic household which in 2007 created 6 700 000 tonnes of food waste Potatoes bread slices and apples are respectively the most wasted foods by quantity while salads are thrown away in the greatest proportion A majority of wasted food is avoidable d with the rest being divided almost equally by foods which are unavoidable e g tea bags and unavoidable due to preference e g bread crusts or cooking type e g potato skins Reducing the amount of food waste has been deemed critical if the UK is to meet international targets on climate change limiting greenhouse gas emissions and meet obligations under the European Landfill Directive to reduce biodegradable waste going to landfill Equally great emphasis has been placed on the reduction of food waste across all developed countries as a means of ending the global food crisis that leaves millions worldwide starving and impoverished In the context of the 2007 2008 world food price crisis food waste was discussed at the 34th G8 summit in Hokkaidō Japan Then UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown said of the issue We must do more to deal with unnecessary demand such as by all of us doing more to cut our food waste 121 In June 2009 then Environment Secretary Hilary Benn announced the Government s War on waste a programme aimed at reducing Britain s food waste The proposed plans under the scheme included scrapping best before and limiting sell by labels on food creating new food packaging sizes constructing more on the go recycling points and unveiling five flagship anaerobic digestion plants Two years after its launch the Love Food Hate Waste campaign was claiming it had already prevented 137 000 tonnes of waste and through the help it had given to over 2 000 000 households had made savings of 300 000 000 In the UK 6 700 000 tonnes 6 590 000 long tons 7 390 000 short tons per year of wasted food purchased and edible food which is discarded amounts to a cost of 10 2 billion each year This represents costs of 250 to 400 a year per household 122 United States edit According to United States Department of Agriculture USDA between 30 40 percent of food in the U S is wasted 123 Estimates of food waste in the United States range from 35 million tons to 103 million tons 13 In a study done by National Geographic in 2014 Elizabeth Royte indicated more than 30 percent of food in the United States valued at 162 billion annually is not eaten 124 The University of Arizona conducted a study in 2004 that indicated that 14 to 15 of United States edible food is untouched or unopened amounting to 43 billion worth of discarded but edible food 125 In 2010 the United States Department of Agriculture came forth with estimations from the Economic Research Service that approximates food waste in the United States to be equivalent to 141 trillion calories 126 USDA data from 2010 shows that 26 of fish meat and poultry were thrown away at the retail and consumer level Since then meat production has increased by more than 10 Data scientist Harish Sethu says this means that billions of animals are raised and slaughtered only to end up in a landfill 127 Impact on the environment edit nbsp Food waste is responsible for 6 of global greenhouse gas emissionsAccording to United Nations about a third of all human caused greenhouse gas emissions is linked to food 128 Empirical evidence at the global level on the environmental footprints for major commodity groups suggests that if the aim is to reduce land use the primary focus should be on meat and animal products which account for 60 percent of the land footprint associated with food loss and waste 12 If the aim is to target water scarcity cereals and pulses make the largest contribution more than 70 percent followed by fruits and vegetables 12 In terms of greenhouse gas GHG emissions associated with food loss and waste the biggest contribution is again from cereals and pulses more than 60 percent followed by roots tubers and oil bearing crops 12 However the environmental footprint for different commodities also varies across regions and countries due among other things to differences in crop yields and production techniques 12 According to the IPCC 6th Assessment Report the reduction of food waste would be beneficial for improving availability of resources such as water land use energy consumption and the overall reduction of greenhouse gas emissions into the atmosphere 129 Prevention and valorisation edit nbsp nbsp Limiting food wastage has seen the adoption of former World War I and World War II slogans by antiwaste groups such as WRAP 122 In 2022 United Nations Biodiversity Conference nations adopted an agreement for preserving biodiversity including a commitment to reduce food waste by 50 by the year 2030 11 According to FAO s The State of Food and Agriculture 2019 the case for reducing food loss and waste includes gains that society can reap but which individual actors may not take into account namely i increased productivity and economic growth ii improved food security and nutrition and iii mitigation of environmental impacts of losing and wasting food in particular terms of reducing greenhouse gas GHG emissions as well as lowering pressure on land and water resources The last two societal gains in particular are typically seen as externalities of reducing food loss and waste 130 Response to the problem of food waste at all social levels has varied hugely including campaigns from advisory and environmental groups 131 and concentrated media attention on the subject 122 132 As suggested by the food waste hierarchy prevention and reuse pathways for human consumption have the highest priority levels for food waste treatment The general approach to food waste reduction comprise two main pathways prevention and valorisation 133 Prevention of food waste infers all actions that reduce food production and ultimately prevent food from being produced in vain such as food donations or re processing into new food products Valorisation on the other hand comprise actions that recover the materials nutrients or energy in food waste for instance by producing animal feed fuel or energy Multiple studies have studied the environmental benefits of food waste prevention measures including food donations 134 recovery of unharvested vegetables for re use in food production 135 re processing of surplus bread for beer production 136 and producing chutney or juice from leftovers 137 Food waste can also be used to produce multiple high value products such as a fish oil substitute for food or feed use via marine micro algae 138 without compromising the ability to produce energy via biogas The general consensus currently suggest that reducing food waste by either prevention or valorisation for human consumption infers higher environmental benefits compared to the lower priority levels such as energy production or disposal Multiple private enterprises have developed hardware and software solutions dealing mainly with the prevention of food waste within foodservice production facilities contract catering hotels amp resorts cruise ships casinos etc by gathering quantitative and qualitative data about the specific food waste helping chefs and managers reduce food waste by up to 70 by improving and optimising their workflows and menus Food rescue edit Main article food rescue There are multiple initiatives that rescue food that would otherwise not be consumed by humans anymore The food can come from supermarkets restaurants or private households for example Such initiatives are food banks online platforms like Too Good To Go and Olio public foodsharing shelves like those from foodsharing de and dumpster diving Consumer marketing edit One way of dealing with food waste is to reduce its creation Consumers can reduce spoilage by planning their food shopping avoiding potentially wasteful spontaneous purchases and storing foods properly and also preventing a too large buildup of perishable stock 131 Widespread educational campaigns have been shown to be an effective way to reduce food waste 139 A British campaign called Love Food Hate Waste has raised awareness about preventative measures to address food waste for consumers Through advertisements information on food storage and preparation and in store education the UK observed a 21 decrease in avoidable household food waste over the course of 5 years 140 Another potential solution is for smart packaging which would indicate when food is spoiled more precisely than expiration dates currently do for example with temperature sensitive ink 141 plastic that changes color when exposed to oxygen 142 or gels that change color with time 143 An initiative in Curitiba Brazil called Cambio Verde allows farmers to provide surplus produce produce they would otherwise discard due to too low prices to people that bring glass and metal to recycling facilities to encourage further waste reduction 144 In Europe the Food Surplus Entrepreneurs Network FSE Network coordinates a network of social businesses and nonprofit initiatives with the goal to spread best practices to increase the use of surplus food and reduction of food waste 145 An overarching consensus exists on the substantial environmental benefits of food waste reduction 146 However rebound effects may cause substitutive consumption as a result of economic savings made from food waste prevention potentially offsetting more than half of the avoided emissions depending on the type of food and price elasticities involved 147 148 Collection edit nbsp Bins of food waste in ReFood bins locked in a cage to prevent dumpster divingIn areas where the waste collection is a public function food waste is usually managed by the same governmental organization as other waste collection Most food waste is combined with general waste at the source Separate collections also known as source separated organics have the advantage that food waste can be disposed of in ways not applicable to other wastes In the United States companies find higher and better uses for large commercial generators of food and beverage waste From the end of the 19th century through the middle of the 20th century many municipalities collected food waste called garbage as opposed to trash separately This was typically disinfected by steaming and fed to pigs either on private farms or in municipal piggeries 149 Separate curbside collection of food waste is now being revived in some areas To keep collection costs down and raise the rate of food waste segregation some local authorities especially in Europe have introduced alternate weekly collections of biodegradable waste including e g garden waste which enable a wider range of recyclable materials to be collected at reasonable cost and improve their collection rates However they result in a two week wait before the waste will be collected The criticism is that particularly during hot weather food waste rots and stinks and attracts vermin Waste container design is therefore essential to making such operations feasible Curbside collection of food waste is also done in the U S some ways by combining food scraps and yard waste together Several states in the U S have introduced a yard waste ban not accepting leaves brush trimmings etc in landfills Collection of food scraps and yard waste combined is then recycled and composted for reuse Disposal editAs alternatives to landfill food waste can be composted to produce soil and fertilizer fed to animals or insects or used to produce energy or fuel Some wasted fruit parts can also be biorefined to extract useful substances for the industry i e succinic acid from orange peels lycopene from tomato peels Landfills and greenhouse gases edit Main article landfill gas Dumping food waste in a landfill causes odour as it decomposes attracts flies and vermin and has the potential to add biological oxygen demand BOD to the leachate The European Union Landfill Directive and Waste Regulations like regulations in other countries which enjoin diverting organic wastes away from landfill disposal for these reasons Starting in 2015 organic waste from New York City restaurants will be banned from landfills 150 In countries such as the United States and the United Kingdom food scraps constitute around 19 of the waste buried in landfills where it biodegrades very easily and produces methane a powerful greenhouse gas 151 Methane or CH4 is the second most prevalent greenhouse gas that is released into the air also produced by landfills in the U S Although methane spends less time in the atmosphere 12 years than CO2 it is more efficient at trapping radiation It is 25 times greater to impact climate change than CO2 in a 100 year period Humans accounts over 60 of methane emissions globally 152 Fodder and insect feed edit Large quantities of fish meat dairy and grain are discarded at a global scale annually when they can be used for things other than human consumption The feeding of food scraps or slop to domesticated animals such as pigs or chickens is historically the most common way of dealing with household food waste The animals turn roughly two thirds of their ingested food into gas or fecal waste while the last third is digested and repurposed as meat or dairy products There are also different ways of growing produce and feeding livestock that could ultimately reduce waste Bread and other cereal products discarded from the human food chain could be used to feed chickens Chickens have traditionally been given mixtures of waste grains and milling by products in a mixture called chicken scratch As well giving table scraps to backyard chickens is a large part of that movement s claim to sustainability though not all backyard chicken growers recommend it 153 Ruminants and pigs have also been fed bakery waste for a long time 154 Certain food waste such as flesh can also be used as feed in maggot farming 155 The maggots can then be fed to other animals In China some food waste is being processed by feeding it to cockroaches 156 Composting edit Main article Compost nbsp Inevitable waste peels of potato onion lemon tangerine banana kiwi egg shellFood waste can be biodegraded by composting and reused to fertilize soil Composting is the aerobic process completed by microorganisms in which the bacteria break down the food waste into simpler organic materials that can then be used in soil 157 By redistributing nutrients and high microbial populations compost reduces water runoff and soil erosion by enhancing rainfall penetration which has been shown to reduce the loss of sediment nutrients and pesticide losses to streams by 75 95 158 Composting food waste leads to a decrease in the quantity of greenhouse gases released into the atmosphere In landfills organic food waste decomposes anaerobically producing methane gas that is emitted into the atmosphere When this biodegradable waste is composted it decomposes aerobically and does not produce methane but instead produces organic compost that can then be utilized in agriculture 159 Recently the city of New York has begun to require that restaurants and food producing companies begin to compost their leftover food 160 Another instance of composting progress is a Wisconsin based company called WasteCap who is dedicated towards aiding local communities create composting plans 161 Municipal Food Waste MFW can be composted to create this product of organic fertilizer and many municipalities choose to do this citing environmental protection and economic efficiency as reasoning Transporting and dumping waste in landfills requires both money and room in the landfills that have very limited available space 162 One municipality who chose to regulate MFW is San Francisco who requires citizens to separate compost from trash on their own instituting fines for non compliance at 100 for individual homes and 500 for businesses The city s economic reasoning for this controversial mandate is supported by their estimate that one business can save up to 30 000 annually on garbage disposal costs with the implementation of the required composting 159 Home composting edit Composting is an economical and environmentally conscious step many homeowners could take to reduce their impact on landfill waste Instead of food scraps and spoiled food taking up space in trashcans or stinking up the kitchen before the bag is full it could be put outside and broken down by worms and added to garden beds Anaerobic digestion edit Main article anaerobic digestion Anaerobic digestion produces both useful gaseous products and a solid fibrous compostable material Anaerobic digestion plants can provide energy from waste by burning the methane created from food and other organic wastes to generate electricity defraying the plants costs and reducing greenhouse gas emissions The United States Environmental Protection Agency states that the use of anaerobic composting allows for large amounts of food waste to avoid the landfills Instead of producing these greenhouse gasses into the environment from being in a landfill the gasses can alternatively be harnessed in these facilities for reuse 163 Since this process of composting produces high volumes of biogas there are potential safety issues such as explosion and poisoning 164 These interactions require proper maintenance and personal protective equipment is utilized 165 Certain U S states such as Oregon have implemented the requirement for permits on such facilities based on the potential danger to the population and surrounding environment 166 Food waste coming through the sanitary sewers from garbage disposal units is treated along with other sewage and contributes to sludge Commercial liquid food waste edit See also Vegetable oil recycling Commercially food waste in the form of wastewater coming from commercial kitchens sinks dishwashers and floor drains is collected in holding tanks called grease interceptors to minimize flow to the sewer system This often foul smelling waste contains both organic and inorganic waste chemical cleaners etc and may also contain hazardous hydrogen sulfide gases It is referred to as fats oils and grease FOG waste or more commonly brown grease versus yellow grease which is fryer oil that is easily collected and processed into biodiesel and is an overwhelming problem especially in the US for the aging sewer systems Per the US EPA sanitary sewer overflows also occur due to the improper discharge of FOGs to the collection system 167 Overflows discharge 3 10 billion U S gallons 11 38 million cubic meters of untreated wastewater annually into local waterways and up to 3 700 illnesses annually are due to exposure to contamination from sanitary sewer overflows into recreational waters 168 See also edit nbsp Food portalGleaning Anaerobic digestion Waste amp Resources Action Programme List of waste types Post harvest losses grains Post harvest losses vegetables Source Separated Organics Waste managementSources edit nbsp This article incorporates text from a free content work Licensed under CC BY SA 3 0 license statement permission Text taken from The State of Food and Agriculture 2019 Moving forward on food loss and waste reduction In brief 24 FAO FAO 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Infrastructure Risk Management Research U S Environmental Protection Agency Archived from the original on 2009 11 17 Further reading editPorpino Gustavo 2016 Household Food Waste Behavior Avenues for Future Research Journal of the Association for Consumer Research 1 1 41 51 doi 10 1086 684528 S2CID 56005307 Baylen J Linnekin 2016 Biting the Hands that Feed Us How Fewer Smarter Laws Would Make Our Food System More Sustainable Island Press ISBN 978 1610916752 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Food waste NRDC page on food waste advocacy site with suggestions Reduced Food Waste Solution Summary Project Drawdown 2020 Food Waste and Rescue Report in Israel low down food waste Wasting Nothing Project Regeneration 2021 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Food loss and waste amp oldid 1207423307, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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