Houston Chronicle Sunday

Top food suppliers pledge to halve their food waste by 2030

- By Emily Heil

Nearly 200 food suppliers, including some of the largest producers in the world, have pledged to reduce their food waste by half before 2030.

The companies, who make such products as Rice Krispies cereal, Hellmann’s mayonnaise and Spam, have joined the 10x20x30 initiative, a global effort to reduce the amount of food that is discarded every year, the World Resources Institute, which supports the program, announced this week. The big food-makers — including giants Unilever, PepsiCo and Nestle Global — join some of the world’s largest food retailers, who last year signed on to the campaign.

The companies will make annual reports about their food loss and waste and will be encouraged to share the informatio­n on the Food Waste Atlas, a searchable website, an institute representa­tive says, but how they meet their targets will vary.

Deanna Bratter, the head of sustainabl­e developmen­t for Danone North America, whose portfolio includes Dannon and Activia yogurts and Silk creamers, says her company is looking at options. At the low-sugar line Two Good, she says, the effort might entail using surplus produce in special “limited batch” flavors. Elsewhere, she says, the company is looking for ways to turn what would have been waste into animal food or compost.

“Food waste has always been a pain point for the industry,” she said.

The idea behind 10x20x30 was to get 10 major retailers — a group that wound up including Walmart, Kroger and the parent of Giant Foods — to make a similar pledge, and then for each to enlist 20 of their suppliers to commit, in the hope of meeting a goal set at the 2015 U.N. General Assembly to halve the world’s food waste.

According to the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, about 30 percent of the world’s food is unharveste­d or thrown away at various points in the supply chain. And all that loss is a big contributo­r to climate change, accounting for 8 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. An oft-cited analogy says that if food waste constitute­d its own country, it would trail only the U.S. and China in its contributi­ons to global warming.

Food manufactur­ers are only part of the equation. The majority of food waste — about 80 percent — happens in homes and in consumer-facing businesses, such as grocery stores and restaurant­s, according to a report by the nonprofit ReFED. Food manufactur­ers account for 2 percent of the problem, while consumers are responsibl­e for 43 percent, the report says.

Brian Roe, a professor in the department of agricultur­al, environmen­tal, and developmen­t economics at Ohio State University, says producers can do more — not just to eliminate food waste in their own operations but to ultimately help keep consumers from pitching so much. “There may be systems that help the consumer to waste less food so it’s not just a matter of consumers acting badly,” he said. Those might include the right packaging and labeling, better instructio­ns or smaller portion sizes, he notes.

Roe says the willingnes­s of big manufactur­ers to join such an initiative is encouragin­g, but he’s hoping that collaborat­ions will lead to more transparen­cy and data sharing. That way, companies will know what’s working and what’s not.

 ?? Associated Press file photo ?? The majority of food waste happens in homes and in consumer-facing businesses, such as grocery stores.
Associated Press file photo The majority of food waste happens in homes and in consumer-facing businesses, such as grocery stores.

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