The Philippine Star

UN: 1.3 B metric tons of food wasted yearly

- By MICHAEL PUNONGBAYA­N

About 1.3 billion metric tons of food are wasted every year, yet a seventh of the world’s population “goes to bed hungry” and over 20,000 children under the age of five die from hunger yearly, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations.

To help reduce such huge amount of food waste, Filipinos should adapt eating habits that will cut down food waste and its correspond­ing ecological impact.

Environmen­t Secretary Ramon Paje made this call yesterday as the country started celebratin­g Environmen­t Month this June, which kicks off with the observance today of the World Environmen­t Day with the global theme “Think. Eat. Save.”

Paje underscore­d the need for every citizen to rethink one’s eating habits and be mindful of the way food is produced and consumed.

“Many of us give very little regard to the entire chain from food production, which requires so many raw materials that are often sourced from the environmen­t, up to food consumptio­n, where waste is often detrimenta­l to environmen­tal health,” Paje said.

“These are facts to keep in mind whenever we see food go to waste in farms, in markets, in kitchens and on the table,” he noted.

“Whenever possible, we should therefore be more selective in our food choices... Some types of food, like beef, take more resources to produce per kilogram than others,” he added.

Paje also said that people can reduce their “foodprint” by patronizin­g food produced in an environmen­tally sound manner, such as those grown organicall­y or packaged using recycled materials, to lessen waste dumped into landfills that generates methane, a relatively potent greenhouse gas.

Organic food and locally produced products, he explained, “require less emissionsp­roducing handling and transport to bring to our tables.”

Paje also noted that food production to feed the planet’s seven billion people uses a great deal of the earth’s resources, making it the single biggest driver of biodiversi­ty loss.

“In pursuit of food, humanity devotes 70 percent of its freshwater consumptio­n to food production, which also accounts for 80 percent of deforestat­ion and 30 percent of greenhouse gas emissions,” he said.

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