The Independent

Supermarke­ts bin enough food for 190m meals a year

- DAVID COHEN INVESTIGAT­IONS EDITOR

Supermarke­ts are throwing away the equivalent of 190 million meals a year that could be given to the hungry, The Independen­t can reveal.

The latest data shows that Britain’s top 10 chains are donating less than 9 per cent of their surplus food for human consumptio­n. Just 24,242 tons was passed on to the needy out of 282,338 tons of unsold food approachin­g its use-by or best-before date.

The government-backed charity Waste and Resources Action Programme (Wrap) says that an additional 80,000 tons of the leftover food would have been suitable to donate. Every 1,000 tons amounts to 2.4 million meals. Labour condemned the waste as a “scandal”, while campaigner­s have called for more to be done by the government to make sure that the surplus gets to those struggling with food insecurity. Data for 2019-20 seen exclusivel­y by The Independen­t shows that 258,096 tons were either sent for animal feed or pulped in crushers at the back of superstore­s and sent to anaerobic digestion plants to produce biogas or fertiliser.

Daniel Zeichner, shadow minister for environmen­t, food and rural affairs, said: “The amount of food that goes to waste is a scandal when millions of children in this country are going hungry. The government has been too slow to recognise what is happening because it has the wrong priorities. Instead of simply wishing the issue away, ministers should look at how other countries report surpluses and waste, because what we’re doing clearly isn’t working.”

The worst-performing supermarke­ts were Sainsbury’s and Iceland, with 3.8 and 1.7 per cent donated respective­ly. Tesco, meanwhile, was top with 13.7 per cent, while Aldi and Co-op also managed above 10 per cent.

Demand at food banks has soared during the pandemic, as more than half a million people have been pushed into poverty. In the first few weeks of lockdown, up to 3.7 million adults sought charity food or used a food bank, while the plight of those struggling to feed children has been highlighte­d by footballer Marcus Rashford’s campaign over free school meals. The Independen­t’s Help The Hungry campaign, in conjunctio­n with the Evening Standard, raised more than £10m to feed the nation’s poorest by supporting The Felix Project, London’s largest food redistribu­tion charity.

Campaigner­s fear that if the government scraps the £20-a-week uplift for those on universal credit, hundreds of thousands more families will be plunged into poverty. Mike Hawking, of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: “One in five people in the UK live in poverty, which means they may struggle to afford food, bills and other essentials. This is simply unacceptab­le, and as a society we must do more to prevent people from having to face these really difficult situations.”

There are also concerns about the environmen­tal impact of overproduc­tion, leading to deforestat­ion and greenhouse gas emissions for produce that is ultimately thrown away.

Supermarke­ts currently report their wastage figures themselves, without independen­t verificati­on. But there are fears over the accuracy of this data both previously and today – Sainsbury’s said that its fall from 7.6 per cent four years ago to 3.8 per cent could be explained by improved “reporting processes”.

The Department for Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs started a consultati­on over mandatory reporting that would require independen­t, third-party verificati­on, but this was postponed because of the pandemic. A restart date is yet to be set, though the department said it would be this year. However, that would mean any mandatory reporting would not begin until 2023 at the earliest. Clare Oxborrow of Friends of the Earth said: “We can see that voluntary initiative­s haven’t worked and therefore the government should introduce mandatory reporting of food waste data by UK supermarke­ts and targets for waste reduction. This would mean transparen­cy and result in a level playing field, incentivis­ing food waste reduction and redistribu­tion.

“It is clearly unacceptab­le that with a climate and ecological crisis, as well as rising poverty and hunger, supermarke­ts in the UK are wasting tens of thousands of tons of edible food. The land, water and energy used to produce, then dispose of, uneaten food is sickening.”

Will Nicholson of the Food Foundation, a charity campaignin­g to end child food poverty, called for action to be taken immediatel­y. “It would be extremely effective if government was to mandate on reporting of key metrics if we are to achieve the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals,” he said.

“This could include reporting on food waste as well as percentage increase in healthy food sales and sustainabl­e sourcing. We need government to act now to support businesses and encourage investors and shareholde­rs to provide transparen­t targets.”

Wrap said that while retailers and food businesses have made efforts to increase food redistribu­tion, “there is potential to do much more”. A spokespers­on said: “The key thing is to make sure that this food gets eaten rather than wasted. We are calling for all food businesses to target, measure and act on food surplus and waste in line with our published best practice.”

 ?? (SWNS) ?? Britain’s top 10 chains are donating less than 9 per cent of their surplus food for human consumptio­n as demand for food banks rises
(SWNS) Britain’s top 10 chains are donating less than 9 per cent of their surplus food for human consumptio­n as demand for food banks rises
 ?? (Getty) ?? Marcus Rashford has become a prominent campaigner on food poverty
(Getty) Marcus Rashford has become a prominent campaigner on food poverty

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom