Tuesday, October 4, 2016

Food waste difficult to reduce

Reducing food waste is proving a difficult challenge, according to a new report from the Value Chain Management Institute.

The study found that 31 per cent of the total food available for consumption in retail (10 per cent) and household (21 per cent) was lost or wasted in 2010. 

That’s six billon kilos, enough to fill 60,000 rail cars, stretching 1,000 kilometres.

The authors found that most efforts that have been taken are waste diversion, not waste prevention. That’s because waste diversion does not require fundamental change, requires limited investment to appear effective, and poses limited risk to government and industry, the report says. 

“No two food chains are alike, with the unnecessary food loss and waste that occurs along each chain differing in location, type and cause,” the report says. That means solutions need to be specific to each chain.

 “Government policies and legislation that are not transparently congruent have the potential to increase rather than decrease unnecessary food loss and waste that occurs along the value chain,” the report says. 

“The deeply rooted structural, cultural and institutional barriers that create unnecessary FLW would be best addressed through industry- government partnerships.

“The development of effective government policies and legislation is hindered due to the fact that insufficient information exists on what, where, why and how food losses and wastes are created along the value chain,” the report says.

“Effective and sustainable solutions could be achieved by voluntary agreements between industry and government versus forcing change through policies and regulations,” it says.