Kuwait Times

Shots fired in Australia’s war on food waste

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Australia’s first recycled supermarke­t is giving food destined for landfills a second chance, as the government embarks on a major push to cut down on waste costing the economy Aus$20 billion a year. The outlet run by food rescue organizati­on OzHarvest in Sydney takes surplus products normally thrown out by major supermarke­ts, airlines and other suppliers, and gives them away for free.

It is an attempt to tackle the mounting waste problem in Australia, home to 24 million people, where consumers toss out some 20 percent of food they buy with more than four million tons ending up as rubbish each year. “It is simply remarkable that in prosperous, modernday Australia we produce enough food to feed 60 million people a year but every month more than 600,000 peopleone-third of them children-seek food relief from relevant charities,” Environmen­t Minister Josh Frydenberg said in April.

The government is drawing up an ambitious plan to halve food waste by 2030 and is convening a national summit later this year involving the private sector and non-profit organizati­ons. Globally, one-third of food produced for humans-about 1.3 billion tons costing around US$1 trillion-is lost or wasted annually, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO). Such wastage is particular­ly conspicuou­s in retail, where “large quantities” of food are thrown away “due to quality standards that over-emphasize appearance”, the UN body added.

That’s where supermarke­ts like OzHarvest come in, said founder Ronni Kahn, a leading voice in Australia’s food rescue community, who hopes the popup store will raise awareness about sustainabl­e living. Besides the needy, “there are people (at the supermarke­t) who want to take part in this sharing economy... taking produce and understand­ing why this produce was rejected, why is this here, why is this surplus”, she said as she pointed to bread donated by a bakery. Long queues have formed outside the shop since it opened in late April, with the unemployed, single mothers, and students among those who leave with bulging bags of groceries.

Tip of the waste iceberg

What we eat or throw away is just the tip of the iceberg in the production process, conservati­on experts say, with huge amounts of resources such as fertilizer­s, fuel, land and water used to grow and package food. “When food’s wasted, and all of those resources are wasted as well, what’s incumbent upon us is to make the most of the food that we produce in those instances, rather than producing more and more,” said Marcus Godinho of charity FareShare.

FareShare tackles waste by cooking large quantities of food that farmers and manufactur­ers struggle to offload, or which is due to expire, in a 500-squaremetr­e kitchen in Melbourne before freezing and storing it for distributi­on to the disadvanta­ged at a later date. Also reducing waste at a wholesale level is Yume, an online platform connecting suppliers and buyers for hard-to-sell surplus produce at significan­tly discounted prices, chief Katy Barfield said.

“It (the unwanted food) can be cancelled orders, it can be mislabeled, it can be brand refresh, it can be export orders that get cancelled, it can be specificat­ions... that are not what the retailers want,” Melbourne-based Barfield said. Barfield, who previously headed up food rescue charity SecondBite, wants to take the platform global as she develops it to handle millions of transactio­ns. “Because it’s a piece of technology, there are no barriers to scaling it,” she said.

With Canberra stepping into the fray, waste warriors are optimistic that incentives including tax breaks could reduce excess in supply chains and encourage businesses to keep surplus food still fit for consumptio­n away from landfills. Even public institutio­ns such as schools, hospitals and prisons could make their procuremen­t of food more sustainabl­e by buying surplus products through platforms like Yume, Barfield added. “It would save food going to waste, it would be good for the environmen­t, it would be very good for the taxpayers’ pockets because we would be paying less for the food, and I think it’s a win, win, win,” she said.

 ??  ?? SYDNEY: This picture shows a customer putting money into a donation box at the counter after shopping at OzHarvest Market, a recycled food supermarke­t, in Sydney.
SYDNEY: This picture shows a customer putting money into a donation box at the counter after shopping at OzHarvest Market, a recycled food supermarke­t, in Sydney.

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