Wales On Sunday

Selling ‘wonky veg’ could cut food waste

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SUPERMARKE­TS should sell “wonky veg” as part of their main fruit and vegetable lines to help cut food waste, MPs have urged.

Knobbly carrots and parsnips do not taste or cook any differentl­y from other vegetables and should be saved from supermarke­t reject bins, Environmen­t, Food and Rural Affairs Committee chairman Neil Parish said.

Both supermarke­ts and the Government need to do more to tackle the UK’s food waste problem, which sees £10 billion-worth of food thrown away by households each year, according to a report from the parliament­ary committee.

The Government should set an “ambitious” national reduction target to cut the food waste that costs the average person £200 a year, the MPs said.

Raising awareness of food waste from a young age should be a priority, they said.

It is also essential that waste reduction body Wrap, which has seen its funding cut despite its achievemen­ts in reducing food waste through voluntary agreements, has sufficient money from the Government.

The incoming government should continue with a review on food date labelling, looking particular­ly at whether there is a need for “best before” dates.

And food businesses and retailers should separate food waste for collection.

Supermarke­ts should be required by the Government to publish data on the amount of food they bin, the report said, commending Tesco for already doing so and Sainsbury’s for moving in the same direction.

Retailers should also increase the amount of surplus food they give to charities, and improve packaging, such as increasing resealable packets, to help consumers reduce waste.

Mr Parish said: “Economical­ly, food waste costs households hundreds of pounds a year and causes increased disposal costs to local authoritie­s, pushing up council tax bills.

“Socially, it is a scandal that people are going hungry and using food banks when so much produce is being wasted.

“And environmen­tally, energy and resources are wasted in production only for the food to end up rotting in landfills where it produces methane – a potent climate-changing gas.”

He called for the Government to drive reducing food waste in England with a national target like Scotland, the US and European countries.

“And supermarke­ts need to do much more. It’s ridiculous that perfectly good vegetables are wasted simply because they’re a funny shape.”

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