Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S. food waste solutions sought

Officials ask for EPA’s help

- MELINA WALLING

CHICAGO — More than one-third of the food produced in the United States is never eaten. Much of it ends up in landfills, where it generates tons of methane that hastens climate change. That’s why more than 50 local officials signed a letter Tuesday calling on the Environmen­tal Protection Agency to help municipal government­s cut food waste in their communitie­s.

The letter came on the heels of two recent reports from the EPA on the scope of America’s food waste problem and the damage that results from it. The local officials pressed the agency to expand grant funding and technical help for landfill alternativ­es. They also urged the agency to update landfill standards to require better prevention, detection and reduction of methane emissions, something scientists already have the technology to do but which can be challengin­g to implement since food waste breaks down and starts generating methane quickly.

Tackling food waste is a daunting challenge that the U.S. has taken on before. In 2015, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e and the EPA set a goal of cutting food waste in half by 2030, but the country has made little progress, said Claudia Fabiano, who works on food waste management for the EPA.

“We’ve got a long way to go,” Fabiano said.

Researcher­s say the EPA reports provide sorely needed informatio­n. One report found that 58% of methane emissions from landfills come from food waste, a major issue because methane is responsibl­e for about a quarter of global warming and has significan­tly more warming potential than carbon dioxide.

With the extent of the problem clearly defined, some elected leaders and researcher­s hope to take action, but they say it will take not just investment of resources but also a major mindset shift from the public. Farmers may need to change some practices, manufactur­ers will need to rethink how they package and market goods and individual­s need to find ways to keep food from going to waste.

So for the first time since the 1990s, the EPA updated its ranking of preferred strategies for waste reduction, ranging from preventing wasted food altogether (by not producing or buying it in the first place) to composting or anaerobic digestion, a process by which food waste can be turned into biogas inside a reactor. Prevention remains the top strategy, but the new ranking includes more nuances comparing the options so communitie­s can decide how to prioritize their investment­s.

Reducing waste requires a big psychologi­cal change and lifestyle shift from individual­s no matter what. Researcher­s say households are responsibl­e for at least 40% of food waste in the U.S.

It’s a more urgent problem than ever, said Weslynne Ashton, a professor of environmen­tal management and sustainabi­lity at the Illinois Institute of Technology who was not involved with the EPA reports. Americans have been conditione­d to expect abundance at grocery stores and on their plates, and it’s expensive to pull all that food out of the waste stream.

“I think it is possible to get zero organic waste into landfills,” Ashton said. “But it means that we need an infrastruc­ture to enable that in different locations within cities and more rural regions. It means we need incentives both for households as well as for commercial institutio­ns.”

With the problem clearly defined and quantified, it remains to be seen whether communitie­s and states will get extra help or guidance from the federal level — and how much change they can make either way. The EPA has recently channeled some money from the Inflation Reduction Act toward supporting recycling, which did include some funding for organics waste, but those are relatively new programs.

Some local government­s have been working on this issue for a while. California began requiring every jurisdicti­on to provide organic waste collection services starting in 2022. Others don’t have as much of a head start. Chicago, for instance, just launched a citywide composting pilot program two weeks ago that set up free food waste dropoff points around the city, but prospectiv­e users have to transport their food scraps themselves.

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