Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

A food bank deposit that feeds 10,000

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Nearly 26 metric tons of food that would have been destined for landfills in the past three years in Guangzhou, Guangdong province, have instead been used to feed more than 10,000 people thanks to a local food bank.

Chen Jiahua and Zhang Ying, both in their early 20s, started a food bank in 2017 to salvage food that was still good but was not used or close to expiring. The food bank, PDT Food Depot, named after pommede terre, French for potato, started distributi­on in communitie­s in Guangzhou. It then expanded to a much greater part of the city with the help of the Shanghai Oasis Ecological Conservati­on and Communicat­ion Center, which set up the country’s first food bank in 2014.

The program also joined Oasis’ food bank network. Partners within the network share informatio­n about obtaining donated products — usually food items close to their “best before” dates from supermarke­ts and producers or excess from restaurant­s — so that the food can be redistribu­ted to the nearest recipients.

“We also learned from Shanghai Oasis the practices and legal framework for operating a food bank in the country,” said Chen, who has signed up 12 food businesses, including major companies such as Kellogg’s and Kraft Heinz Co, as donors. PDT has also opened 19 social work facilities that offer services such as centers to care for the homeless and welfare facilities for mentally challenged children who are hungry.

“Our goal is to develop a food redistribu­tion network covering South China while exploring a future of zero food waste with joint efforts from food companies and consumers, especially as the country recently started a nationwide drive to avoid unnecessar­y food waste,” Chen said.

She learned about food banks while studying environmen­tal science at McGill University in Montreal. There, Chen and others who helped set up the Guangzhou food bank were honored when PDT Food Depot won second place in the university’s 2019 competitio­n for the McGill Dobson Cup for the best startup idea, according to the July issue of a McGill newsletter.

This year, the program aims to reduce by 100 tons the amount of food wasted in Guangzhou through sharing and donation, she said.

Like in Guangzhou, food banks, which mostly redistribu­te staple foods, cooking oil and milk powder to impoverish­ed families, have grown up around the country.

The goals are not only to salvage food that otherwise would be wasted, but also to protect the environmen­t and help low-income individual­s and families, said Li Bing, founder of Shanghai Oasis, a nongovernm­ental organizati­on.

“We hope to help impoverish­ed families cut down on food expenses and be able to use the money for health and education purposes instead, while helping businesses minimize their food waste.”

Oasis’ food bank network has been extended to at least 11 provincial-level regions, including Beijing, Sichuan province, the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region and Liaoning province. Some of those efforts have been supervised by Oasis, but at least five local food banks learned from the Oasis model and joined its food distributi­on network.

Oasis said 580 tons of food worth more than 31 million yuan ($4.5 million) produced by 202 food enterprise­s had been salvaged by the end of 2019. The food was distribute­d to 760,000 individual­s at nearly 250 nonprofit organizati­ons, communitie­s and schools.

“However, what made us happier was not the figures but the rising awareness of reducing food waste among more enterprise­s, institutio­ns and grassroots and city-level government­s, which reached out to work with us.”

Local communitie­s always react positively to food banks wherever they go because people receive tangible benefits.

“We often said, in amazement, that the donated food items are of very good quality. We ourselves wouldn’t even buy some of them because they are pricey. But without food banks they would have been wasted only because of overproduc­tion or their approachin­g the end of their shelf life,” said Zheng Liang, a volunteer for the food bank in Shanghai.

 ?? YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEW SERVICE ?? Workers wait for free vegetables at a food bank in Shanghai.
YIN LIQIN / CHINA NEW SERVICE Workers wait for free vegetables at a food bank in Shanghai.

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