Thank you for the figure you were looking at it led me to the original source for that data which is actually even more wild.
So in the North America region it’s actually worse with it being around 61% of food loss occurs at the consumption stage and 42% of food overall is wasted which is INSANELY high and nearly double that of Europe.
Man I guess we really do need to eat more.
Consumption stage however does include restaurants and catering, as well as in the home use.
With according to the study the 3 main reasons being
• sorted out for appearance
• not consumed before expired
• cooked but not eaten
It’s speculative to try and guess the amount that is from restaurants and commercial food prep but I would guess the amount thrown out by the cumulative 300+ million Americans each day is probably a good chunk of the percentage if not the majority.
It’s a joke about not being able to do less. Nowhere in the research papers do they suggest as a solution less production just more composting or self responsibility for buy less or ways to make scraps more edible.
It’s a joke of line doesn’t go down. Sorry guess the sarcasm doesn’t come through even with the bolded text.
I mean they do cite limitation in food storage as one of the issues to be solved with new tech. Frozen doesn’t last forever.
I will say it does feel like sometimes companies make a purposefully gross product to use an ingredient they don’t otherwise kn ow what to do excess of and maybe it’s ok if that just goes back to farms at growing stage for compost.
In fact I think my takeaway is I’d rather just us have farm waste then wasting all the energy to make it and then have it end up in the trash where it takes up space and doesn’t contribute back to the planet.
Look at figure 2.
Consumption isn’t 50%, but it’s the largest single bar in that chart - significantly so.
Thank you for the figure you were looking at it led me to the original source for that data which is actually even more wild.
So in the North America region it’s actually worse with it being around 61% of food loss occurs at the consumption stage and 42% of food overall is wasted which is INSANELY high and nearly double that of Europe.
Man I guess we really do need to eat more.
Consumption stage however does include restaurants and catering, as well as in the home use.
With according to the study the 3 main reasons being
• sorted out for appearance
• not consumed before expired
• cooked but not eaten
It’s speculative to try and guess the amount that is from restaurants and commercial food prep but I would guess the amount thrown out by the cumulative 300+ million Americans each day is probably a good chunk of the percentage if not the majority.
Really interesting study, the one you linked too even steals a couple of their charts. Thanks!
http://pdf.wri.org/reducing_food_loss_and_waste.pdf
Not sure why eating more would be the takeaway. Producing less seems like the way to go considering we already massively overeat.
It’s a joke about not being able to do less. Nowhere in the research papers do they suggest as a solution less production just more composting or self responsibility for buy less or ways to make scraps more edible.
It’s a joke of line doesn’t go down. Sorry guess the sarcasm doesn’t come through even with the bolded text.
Looking at the chart you linked my feeling is that the best way to reduce food waste is:
More/tastier/healthier frozen foods.
This will reduce post sales food wastage, as well as wastage at the market.
I mean they do cite limitation in food storage as one of the issues to be solved with new tech. Frozen doesn’t last forever.
I will say it does feel like sometimes companies make a purposefully gross product to use an ingredient they don’t otherwise kn ow what to do excess of and maybe it’s ok if that just goes back to farms at growing stage for compost.
In fact I think my takeaway is I’d rather just us have farm waste then wasting all the energy to make it and then have it end up in the trash where it takes up space and doesn’t contribute back to the planet.