China Daily (Hong Kong)

Ugly Beauty

Reducing global food loss and waste is one of this century’s urgent wake-up calls

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Have you ever wondered why the sandwich you buy during office lunch hour never incorporat­es the crust from a loaf of bread? And if one day it did, would you still buy it? Most likely you wouldn’t, as your aesthetic and epicurean perception­s dictate that tough outer parts of sliced bread don’t make for esculent sandwiches. The store that sells you it thinks the and tosses the two crust loaf it sells each day. But think about such egregious waste the next time you purchase your “poster sandwich” and then digest this: Every year, globally, sufficient food is produced to feed every mouth on the planet multiple times over. Humanity’s model, ironically, has been so successful, that we have created a surfeit in our food n cycles by about 400% while usly destroying the planet’s And yet, the United Nations riculture Organisati­on tes that one-third of all on Earth goes to waste n account of its looks, ccurately, its lack of at amount of produce feed a staggering llion people. r example, just bee a humble banana m Ecuador might oo short, too long oo curved for its tined European ket, or a potaom a field in ce might be mall to be ted by achinery, ers that and h ble FAO tes that six billion pounds of American fruits and vegetables remain unharveste­d or unsold for aesthetic reasons annually. Staggering­ly, as much as 46% of fruits and vegetables never make the journey from farm to fork.

In late July, the FAO unveiled a comprehens­ive platform to help the global community step up action to reduce food loss and waste, gearing up for the inaugural Internatio­nal Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste on September 29, 2020. The initiative brings together a wealth of informatio­n on measuremen­t, reduction, policies, alliances, actions and examples of successful models applied to reduce food loss and waste across the globe.

“Wasting food means wasting scarce natural resources, increasing climate change impact and missing the opportunit­y to feed a growing population in the future,” remarked FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu at the platform’s launch in Rome. The Hunan-born Qu, appointed in August 2019, previously served as China’s Vice-Minister of Agricultur­e and Rural Affairs, and is the first Chinese national to head the organisati­on.

The FAO talks of “food loss” and “food waste”. Of the 33% of food that is lost or wasted in developing countries, as much as 40% of it is lost during the harvesting and processing stages. This is “food loss”.

In developed countries, more or less the same 40% is lost at the consumer or retail stage, throwing away food that isn’t bought at stores or food that remains uneaten at home, restaurant­s or cafeterias. This is “food waste”, and has become a modern-day malaise and a dangerous habit. We buy more than we need at supermarke­ts, letting fruits and vegetables spoil at home or ordering more than we can eat at restaurant­s.

For example, the US produces four times as much food per year as it actually needs to feed its population. Reducing food loss and waste has numerous benefits, such as more food available for the most vulnerable, a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, less pressure on the land and water resources, and increased productivi­ty and economic growth. When we waste food, we waste the labour, money and resources (seeds, water, feed and so on) that go into making the food, not to mention the resources involved in transporti­ng it.

To change the world’s mindset, Qu cites the need for innovation, both technologi­cal and operationa­l, across multiple declension­s of the problem. This includes finding technologi­cal solutions for post-harvest management, new ways of working together and improved food packaging. He also suggests relaxation­s on regulation­s and standards concerning aesthetic requiremen­ts for fruit and vegetables, better consumptio­n habits, government policies targeted at lowering food waste (such as guidelines to redistribu­te safe surplus food to those in need through food banks), and alliance-building that transcends the food sector, for example, with climate agents.

Cutting global food loss by 25% would offset the environmen­tal damage that would be caused by future land use for farming. It means not destroying more forests, with those devastatin­g consequenc­es for climate change and biodiversi­ty to produce more food. It’s now up to the public and private sectors as well as individual­s to promote, harness and scale-up policies to ensure that our relationsh­ip with food becomes more meaningful and influentia­l. Start today and waste not, want not. Know which side your bread – or crust – is buttered. And bon appétit!

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