Shanghai Daily

Young snap up nearly expired food to reduce waste

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EVERY week, Wu Lin, a 19-year-old college student would queue up at a store specializi­ng in selling food nearing its expiration date, and return to her dorm with a bag of discounted snacks.

“These near-expired goods are usually sold at 30 percent to 50 percent of the market price and many of these goods are from big brands, which is very appealing to me,” she said.

Wu is among a growing number of young Chinese who buy near-expired food at reduced prices, a practice that has been spurred by a more rational consumptio­n concept and the adoption of the anti-food-waste law in the country in April.

China’s near-expired food market exceeded 30 billion yuan (US$4.64 billion) in 2020 and 47.8 percent of the consumers are aged 26 to 35, says a report by the iiMedia Research consulting agency.

Over 70,000 young people share tips on buying near-expired food every day on an online community called “I love near-expired food.”

Unlike the traditiona­l thinking that buying such goods is penny-pinching or embarrassi­ng, more and more young people like Wu regard it as the kind of sustainabl­e consumptio­n that can help curb food waste.

“I don’t care much about the date as long as I can eat before its expiry. It meets my demand while saving resources and protecting the environmen­t, which is a good thing,” said Wu.

Food waste is a global issue and has aggravated world hunger. The value of yearly food losses and waste worldwide was estimated at US$400 billion last year, says Maximo Torero, chief economist with the United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on. China is also faced with the problem of food waste, especially in the urban catering industry.

Li Yunjing, a sales clerk at a shop exclusivel­y selling near-expired food in Hefei, in east China’s Anhui Province, used to work in a supermarke­t. She was often perturbed by the waste.

“A lot of expired and near-expired products were disposed of or destroyed directly, which was a great loss,” said Li, adding that the emergence of such shops selling near-expired products can mitigate the waste to some extent.

Brick-and-mortar shops selling food nearing the expiry date have mushroomed in cities across China. HotMaxx, a chain store that opened last year in major cities, has expanded to more than 200 outlets across the country.

“The busiest shop in downtown Hefei witnesses more than 1,000 people a day during the peak season and many are returning customers,” said a worker surnamed Zhou who is in charge of marketing at a HotMaxx outlet in Hefei.

“We usually tie up with well-known supermarke­ts and brands to get quality goods and eliminate unqualifie­d suppliers based on the sampling inspection and consumer feedbacks,” said Zhou.

Online shops selling near-expired food are growing rapidly, too. E-commerce platform Taobao says 2.1 million people buy such food on the platform every year.

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