The Telegram (St. John's)

Report finds Canadians waste a lot of food

Offers suggestion­s on how to lessen the problem

- BY BOB WEBER

An internatio­nal environmen­tal group suggests that reducing Canada’s colossal food waste would be a smart business move and good for the environmen­t.

“You can make a really strong business case for action,” said David Donaldson of the Commission for Environmen­tal Cooperatio­n, an environmen­tal watchdog agency set up under the North American Free Trade Agreement.

Canada is one of the biggest wasters of food on the planet, says the commission’s report, released late last week. The agency found that from farm to table, 396 kilograms of food annually are wasted or lost per capita.

That’s compared with 415 kg in the United States and 249 kg in Mexico.

Food is considered lost when it is spilled or spoiled before it reaches its final destinatio­n.

Not only does that waste have an economic cost — other studies have pegged it at about $30 billion a year — it creates 21 million tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions, largely from landfills.

By far the largest part of the waste comes from consumers, says the report. Every Canadian, on average, tosses away 170 kg of food a year.

The commission’s recommenda­tions focus on the middle part of the food chain where Canada’s groceries are collected, processed, distribute­d and prepared. That’s where the economic case is clearest, Donaldson said.

“You can make a business case for it. Companies can improve the way they do business.”

Restaurant­s could reduce portions, the report suggests.

“It’s not clear to the consumer and sometimes not to businesses that when we say ‘best before’ we’re not talking about a food safety issue.”

— Denise Philippe, National Zero Waste Council

Bread served at tables could be optional. Buffet serving trays could be shallower to reduce the amount of food on display.

Retailers could sell cosmetical­ly imperfect produce at a discount, as some already do. Expiry date labels could be standardiz­ed.

Better tools and techniques to prevent food waste and to make processing and transport more efficient would be a big help, said researcher Tamara Shulman.

“We interviewe­d people from across Canada and everyone’s thirsty to get access to informatio­n,” she said.

James Rillet of Restaurant­s Canada said his industry is well aware of the economic benefits of cutting waste.

“It’s money out of their pockets.” Rillet’s group already runs programs to help restaurate­urs plan better to avoid waste. It’s also working with the Ontario government to avoid food waste due to outdated health guidelines.

But he called some of the report’s

recommenda­tions simplistic.

“Some restaurant­s are known for their portion sizes,” he said. “There’s so many different concepts.

“Consumers want what they want.”

The National Zero Waste Council, which is devoted to cutting waste from the Canadian economy, praised the commission’s report and said it echoed many recommenda­tions it has already made.

“Best-before dates are lowhanging fruit,” said Denise Philippe. “The dates on our food packaging are all over the map.”

Too much food gets tossed because consumers and businesses assume a best-before

date is a deadline and not a quality benchmark, she said.

“It’s not clear to the consumer and sometimes not to businesses that when we say ‘best before’ we’re not talking about a food safety issue.”

Donaldson said more people are becoming aware of the problem.

The commission’s report was produced at the request of the three NAFTA government­s. As well, all three have signed a United Nations pledge to halve food waste and loss by 2030.

A federal strategy is expected this spring.

“The issue of food waste, for the last decade, has really come to the forefront,” Donaldson said.

 ?? JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Beef from the XL Foods cattle processing plant is dumped at a landfill site near Brooks, Alta., on this Oct. 22, 2012 photo. A report from an internatio­nal environmen­tal group is calling for action to reduce the large amount of food wasted in Canada.
JEFF MCINTOSH/THE CANADIAN PRESS Beef from the XL Foods cattle processing plant is dumped at a landfill site near Brooks, Alta., on this Oct. 22, 2012 photo. A report from an internatio­nal environmen­tal group is calling for action to reduce the large amount of food wasted in Canada.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada