The Citizen (Gauteng)

Global waste could rise

- Thomson Reuters Foundation

Food waste could rise by almost a third by 2030 when more than 2 billion tons will be binned, researcher­s said, warning of a “staggering” crisis propelled by a booming world population and changing habits in developing nations.

The United Nations has set a target of halving food loss and waste by 2030. But the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) study found that if current trends continued, it would rise to 2.1 billion tons annually – an amount worth $1.5 trillion.

“We are seeing a real crisis at a global level,” one of the study’s authors Esben Hegnsholt told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

“The amounts of waste and the social, economic and environmen­tal implicatio­ns are serious, if we don’t change the trajectory. When we fight food loss and waste, we also fight hunger, poverty and global warming.”

Around a third of the world’s food is lost or thrown away each year. Currently, we waste 1.6 billion tons of food annually, worth about $1.2 trillion dollars.

Much of the projected increase was down to a swelling world population, with more people resulting in more waste, said Hegnsholt, a partner and managing director at the management consultanc­y.

Household waste will increase in developing countries as consumers gain more disposable income, said the report, which identified five key changes which it said could save nearly $700 billion in lost food.

They included more awareness among consumers, stronger regulation­s and better supply chain efficiency and collaborat­ion along the food production chain.

Liz Goodwin, director of the food loss and waste programme at the World Resources Institute, said the report raised serious issues but oversimpli­fied some of the solutions.

“It’s connected with the way our lives have changed and the fact that food is now so much cheaper,” she said, also citing a growing demand for convenienc­e and a lack of cooking skills among younger generation­s.

Goodwin said she believed measures to cut wastage were having an effect, and the world would at least be on the way to meeting the 50% reduction target by 2030.

Consumers, businesses and regulators would all have to play a role in driving change, she said.

“We need a shift in our attitudes to food waste – I think we need to get to the point where it just isn’t acceptable to throw food in the bin,” she said.

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