Oman Daily Observer

America wastes $160 billion in food every year but is too busy to stop

- — Bloomberg

Americans say they feel bad about the 130 billion pounds of food the nation wastes every year. But not badly enough to do anything about it. More than half the respondent­s in a national survey released on Thursday said they are aware of the scale of this $160 billion problem. Almost 80 per cent said they feel guilty when throwing food away, but 51 per cent said it would be difficult to reduce household food waste. And 42 per cent said they don’t have enough time to worry about it.

The study, published in the scientific journal PLOS ONE, found that responses from wealthier Americans showed them less willing to be inconvenie­nced, said Dana Gunders, a food waste expert at the National Resources Defence Council who wrote the first major report about food waste in 2012. Gunders wasn’t involved with the study released on Thursday.

“I’ve always thought it’s a luxury to waste food,” she said.

It gets worse. The fact that less than 60 per cent even understood that wasting food is bad for the environmen­t shows a troubling gap in awareness, said Brian Roe, a co-author of the study and a professor of agricultur­al marketing and policy at Ohio State University, which funded the study. In particular, many aren’t aware that food that ends up in landfills contribute­s to the release of methane, a major contributo­r to global warming. Not to mention all the fuel and fertiliser expended in food production that could be saved if we just ate everything on our plate.

“People haven’t quite made the link between food waste and the environmen­tal consequenc­es of food waste,” Roe said.

In 2013, the bit of a Department of Agricultur­e and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency launched the US Food Waste Challenge to share best practices for limiting food waste. Despite those campaigns, only 42 per cent of the survey’s respondent­s said they believe wasted food is a major source of wasted money. (But 87 per cent bragged that they waste less food than similar households.)

Conducted last July, the survey was administer­ed by the research firm SSRS, which used a national sample of 500 people. The firm used weights to ensure that the sample was representa­tive of the American population in terms of age, gender, and race. The researcher­s also looked at why people waste food, finding that almost 70 per cent threw items away after the package date expired, thinking it reduces the chance of food borne illness. Almost 60 per cent said food waste is necessary to ensure that meals are fresh and flavourful. Previous research (PDF), however, has found package dates to be largely arbitrary and unregulate­d (The sooner they expire, the sooner you buy more, of course). In May, Senator Richard Blumenthal, a Connecticu­t Democrat, and Representa­tive Chellie Pingree, a Maine Democrat, introduced a bill to standardiz­e such labels.

“When you step back and understand that those dates are not about the food safety, we can see that there’s a real opportunit­y for improvemen­t,” Gunders said.

The survey results showed some good news, though: There was a slight increase in food waste awareness, compared with a similar study released last year. Roe said the uptick would have been greater if the survey had been done after September.

That month, the EPA and the Department of Agricultur­e launched a campaign to cut food waste in half by 2030.

Roe compared perception­s of household food waste (which he said accounted for about half of all food waste) with how Americans considered recycling in the 1980s.

He suggested that educationa­l initiative­s and local programmes to make large-scale collection of wasted food easier and in-home composting more practical could make both part of our daily routine.

Many aren’t aware that food that ends up in landfills contribute­s to the release of methane, a major contributo­r to global warming. Not to mention all the fuel and fertiliser expended in food production that could be saved if we just ate everything on our plate.

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