The Sentinel-Record

World wastes 19% of its food, UN says

- CARLOS MUREITHI

NAIROBI, Kenya — The world wasted an estimated 19% of the food produced globally in 2022, or about 1.05 billion metric tons, according to a new United Nations report.

The U.N. Environmen­t Programme’s Food Waste Index Report, published Wednesday, tracks the progress of countries to halve food waste by 2030.

The U.N. said the number of countries reporting for the index nearly doubled from the first report in 2021. The 2021 report estimated that 17% of the food produced globally in 2019, or 931 million metric tons (1.03 billion tons), was wasted, but authors warned against direct comparison­s because of the lack of sufficient data from many countries.

The report is co-authored by UNEP and Waste and Resources Action Programme (WRAP), an internatio­nal charity.

Researcher­s analyzed country data on households, food service and retailers. They found that each person wastes about 79 kilograms (about 174 pounds) of food annually, equal to at least 1 billion meals wasted worldwide daily.

Most of the waste — 60% — came in households. About 28% came from food service, or restaurant­s, with about 12% from retailers.

“It is a travesty,” said co-author Clementine O’Connor, the focal point for food waste at UNEP. “It doesn’t make any sense, and it is a complicate­d problem, but through collaborat­ion and systemic action, it is one that can be tackled.”

The report comes at a time when 783 million people around the world face chronic hunger and many places facing deepening food crises. The Israel-Hamas war and violence in Haiti have worsened the crisis, with experts saying that famine is imminent in northern Gaza and approachin­g in Haiti.

Food waste is also a global concern because of the environmen­tal toll of production, including the land and water required to raise crops and animals and the greenhouse gas emissions it produces, including methane, a powerful gas that has accounted for about 30 percent of global warming since pre-industrial times.

Food loss and waste generates 8 to 10 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. If it were a country, it would rank third after China and the U.S.

Fadila Jumare, a Nigeria-based project associate at Busara Center for Behavioral Economics who has studied prevention of food waste in Kenya and Nigeria, said the problem further disadvanta­ges many people who are already food insecure and cannot afford healthy diets.

“For humanity, food waste means that less food is available to the poorest population,” said Jumare, who wasn’t involved in the report.

Brian Roe, a food waste researcher at Ohio State University who wasn’t involved with the report, said the index is important to tackling food waste.

“The key takeaway is that reducing the amount of food that is wasted is an avenue that can lead to many desirable outcomes — resource conservati­on, fewer environmen­tal damages, greater food security, and more land for uses other than as landfills and food production,” said Roe, who wasn’t involved in the report.

The report showed notable growth in coverage of food waste in low- and middle-income countries, the authors said. But it may fall to wealthier nations to lead in internatio­nal cooperatio­n and policy developmen­t to reduce food waste, they said.

The report said many government­s, regional and industry groups are using public-private partnershi­ps to reduce food waste and its contributi­ons to climate and water stress. Government­s and municipali­ties collaborat­e with businesses in the food supply chain, whereby businesses commit to measure food waste.

The report said food redistribu­tion — including donating surplus food to food banks and charities — is significan­t in tackling food waste among retailers.

One group doing that is Food Banking Kenya, a nonprofit that gets surplus food from farms, markets, supermarke­ts and packing houses and redistribu­tes it to schoolchil­dren and vulnerable population­s. Food waste is an increasing concern in Kenya, where an estimated 4.45 million metric tons (about 4.9 million tons) of food is wasted every year.

“We positively impact the society by providing nutritious food and also positively impact the environmen­t by reducing the emission of harmful gases,” said John Gathungu, the group’s co-founder and executive director.

The report’s authors said they found that the difference­s in per capita household food waste between high-income and lower-income countries were surprising­ly small.

Richard Swannel, a co-author and director of Impact Growth at WRAP, said that shows food waste “is not a rich world problem. It’s a global problem.”

“The data is really clear on this point: that here is a problem right around the world and one that we could all tackle tomorrow to save ourselves money and reduce environmen­tal impact,” he said.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmen­tal coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundation­s. AP is solely responsibl­e for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthro­pies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

 ?? (AP Photo/Paul Sancya/File) ?? Garbage is loaded into a landfill in Lenox Township, Mich., on July 28, 2022. A new United Nations report estimates that 19% of the food produced around the world went to waste in 2022.
(AP Photo/Paul Sancya/File) Garbage is loaded into a landfill in Lenox Township, Mich., on July 28, 2022. A new United Nations report estimates that 19% of the food produced around the world went to waste in 2022.

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