Nearly a fifth of all food reaching consumers wasted: UN
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“This is costly environmentally, socially and economically.”
If all the wasted food were packed into 40-ton container trucks parked end-to-end, they would circle the Earth seven times, he said.
Nearly 700 million people, meanwhile, go to bed hungry every night, according to UN estimates.
Besides sheer volume, the report challenges two widely held views on where food waste is concentrated, both across and within countries.
“Up to now, food waste was seen as a rich world problem,” said co-author Clementine O’Connor, an expert at the UN Environment Programme’s Sustainable Food Systems Programme.
“Our report shows that for every country that has measured food waste, household food waste is a global problem.”
Of the 121 kilos of consumer-level food thrown away each year for every person on the planet, more than half — 74 kilos — is disposed of by households.
The report covers three-quarters of humanity and 54 countries — poor, middle-income and rich — with good enough data to ensure robust findings, the authors said.
It is also the first to focus exclusively on what happens to food at the consumer level, rather than food lost during production, storage, or distribution.
The resulting Food Waste Index is designed to help countries take the measure of the problem within their borders, which could also help curb global warming.
“You have to fix the food system if you’re going to fix climate change, and one of the key priorities in the food system is tackling waste.”
Even as efforts to avoid food waste are scaled up, there remains the problem of what to do with whatever unused or unusable biowaste is left over.
The one place it should not go is landfills, where it emits the powerful greenhouse gas methane and serves no productive purpose, the authors said.
“It’s absurd that we haven’t been better at dealing with this,” said Martina Otto, head of Cities at the UN Environment Programme and a contributor to the report.
There are many alternatives to burying biowaste, including donating food that is still edible, processing it for animal feed, composting, and biogas production.
One technology already operating on an industrial scale in South Africa and elsewhere is the use of black soldier fly larvae to produce protein-rich animal feed.
“There are a number of rich countries that have acted on food waste, and quite successfully,” said Otto, citing the Netherlands and Denmark.
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