Oman Daily Observer

India eyes ways to stop wasting $14bn of food

- UZMI ATHAR

For Bhaskar Kumar it is a struggle to name green leafy vegetables found in India for his homework as his staple diet is rice and salt with vegetables served only on festive occasions. But the eight-year-old from Pilakhana village in India’s northern state of Uttar Pradesh decides not to ask his mother Shakuni Bai, aware she skipped dinner four times that week. For Bai is among 194 million Indians going hungry daily, according to the United Nations’ Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) — despite India wasting food worth about $14 billion a year, according to government figures.

India, one of the world’s largest food producers, is trying to tackle waste during production, processing, retailing and consumptio­n by funding internal initiative­s and by partnershi­ps on best practice and technology with overseas investors.

But many of those struggling to get enough to eat are concerned that progress is too slow in India which ranked 100 among 119 countries in the 2017 Global Hunger Index, with 14.5 per cent of the population undernouri­shed.

Bai said her problems getting food came when three years of inadequate rainfall were followed by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s “demonetisa­tion”, when two of the highest denominati­on notes were scrapped in November 2016.

“I had my own land where I used to grow rice and wheat alternatel­y but with three years of consecutiv­e drought I mortgaged my land to pay the mounting debt,” Bai, 42, said during an interview at her mud-and-brick hut in Pilakhana.

“I decided to give myself a last chance and was planning to pay the mortgage by farming as the forecast suggested good rain in the coming months but then demonetisa­tion happened.

The little money I had saved to buy seeds became worthless,” adding by the time she changed her notes the price of seed had soared.

Bai now works as a daily labourer, earning Rs120 ($1.87) a day, which is not enough to support her family of eight that includes five children.

The paradox of millions going hungry in India while food goes to waste is receiving increasing amounts of attention as the FAO stresses that one third of food produced globally for human consumptio­n is wasted every year.

As the World Economic Forum has highlighte­d, food production is clearly not the main issue as India needs 225-230 million tonnes of food per year to feed its population — and farm output in 2015-2016 hit more than 270 million tonnes.

Sharad Pawar, a former agricultur­e minister, once told parliament that nearly 40 per cent of the value of annual production was wasted, with crops left to rot in the sun without storage or transporta­tion, or eaten by insects and rats.

This wastage has a knock-on effect on the environmen­t as well, as the efforts made to produce this generates greenhouse gases, uses water, and can lead to deforestat­ion.

But while India’s Amul, the world’s largest dairy cooperativ­e, has been widely praised for successful­ly processing huge amounts of milk quickly and safely for years, spurring the so-called “White Revolution” in India, authoritie­s have struggled to stop vast amounts of grain wasting every year.

The Food Corporatio­n of India (FCI), the nation’s main grain procuremen­t agency set up about 50 years ago, now sits on mounds of rice and wheat and has faced criticism for being too weighed down by process and bureaucrac­y to solve the problems.

A report by the government’s Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) published last year involved a detailed analysis on shortcomin­gs of the FCI including wastage, misappropr­iation, and fraudulent payments.

An official with the FCI, who wished to remain anonymous, said a key reason for food waste is damage caused by a lack of infrastruc­ture which it is trying to overcome by investing in building new cold storage facilities over the next five years.

But while this food is wasted, millions of people are going hungry, with 38.4 per cent of children aged under five stunted, according to the Global Hunger Index.

“This reflects the chronic lack of balanced food,” said Ashish Agarwal, a food rights activist with Aligarh-based non-profit group UDAAN Society that focuses on rural developmen­t.

“The under-5 mortality rate is 4.8 per cent in India, partially because of inadequate nutrition and unhealthy environmen­t.”

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