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  over a billion tonnes squandered each year  

cutting food waste to feed the world 11-05-2011 over a billion tonnes squandered each year about one third of food produced for humans is lost or wasted11 may 2011, rome - roughly one third of the food produced in the world for human consumption every year — approximately 1.3 billion tonnes — gets lost or wasted, according to an fao-commissioned study.
the document, global food losses and food waste, was commissioned by fao from the swedish institute for food and biotechnology (sik) for save food!, an international congress being held in düsseldorf 16-17 may at the trade fair of the international packaging industry interpack2011.
other key findings include:
industrialized and developing countries dissipate roughly the same quantities of food — respectively 670 and 630 million tonnes. every year, consumers in rich countries waste almost as much food (222 million tonnes) as the entire net food production of sub-saharan africa (230 million tonnes).fruits and vegetables, plus roots and tubers have the highest wastage rates of any food. the amount of food lost or wasted every year is equivalent to more than half of the world's annual cereals crop (2.3 billion tonnes in 2009/2010). losses and waste
the report distinguishes between food loss and food waste. food losses — occurring at the production, harvest, post-harvest and processing phases — are most important in developing countries, due to poor infrastructure, low levels of technology and low investment in the food production systems.
food waste is more a problem in industrialized countries, most often caused by both retailers and consumers throwing perfectly edible foodstuffs into the trash. per capita waste by consumers is between 95-115 kg a year in europe and north america, while consumers in sub-saharan africa and south and southeast asia each throw away only 6-11 kg a year.
total per capita food production for human consumption is about 900 kg a year in rich countries, almost twice the 460 kg a year produced in the poorest regions. in developing countries 40 percent of losses occur at post-harvest and processing levels while in industrialized countries more than 40 percent of losses happen at retail and consumer levels.
food losses during harvest and in storage translate into lost income for small farmers and into higher prices for poor consumers, the report noted. reducing losses could therefore have an "immediate and significant" impact on their livelihoods and food security.
squandering resources
food loss and waste also amount to a major squandering of resources, including water, land, energy, labour and capital and needlessly produce greenhouse gas emissions, contributing to global warming and climate change.
the report offered a number of practical suggestions on how to reduce losses and waste.
in developing countries the problem is chiefly one of inadequate harvest techniques, poor post-harvest management and logistics, lack of suitable infrastructure, processing and packaging, and lack of marketing information which would allow production to better match demand.
the advice is therefore to strengthen the food supply chain by assisting small farmers to link directly to buyers. the private and public sectors should also invest more in infrastructure, transportation and in processing and packaging.
in middle- and high-income countries food losses and waste stem largely from consumer behaviour but also from lack of communication between different actors in the supply chain.
over-emphasis on appearance
at retail level, large quantities of food are also wasted due to quality standards that over-emphasize appearance. surveys show that consumers are willing to buy produce not meeting appearance standards as long as it is safe and tastes good. customers thus have the power to influence quality standards and should do so, the report said.
selling farm produce closer to consumers, without having to conform to supermarkets' quality standards, is another suggestion. this could be achieved through farmers' markets and farm shops.
good use for food that would otherwise be thrown away should be found. commercial and charity organizations could work with retailers to collect, and then sell or use products that have been disposed of but are still good in terms of safety, taste and nutritional value..
changing consumer attitudes
consumers in rich countries are generally encouraged to buy more food than they need. "buy three, pay two" promotions are one example, while the oversized ready-to-eat meals produced by the food industry are another. restaurants frequently offer fixed-price buffets that spur customers to heap their plates.
generally speaking, consumers fail to plan their food purchases properly, the report found. that means they often throw food away when "best-before" dates expired.
education in schools and political initiatives are possible starting points to changing consumer attitudes, the report suggested. rich-country consumers should be taught that throwing food away needlessly is unacceptable.
they should also be made aware that given the limited availability of natural resources it is more effective to reduce food losses than increase food production in order to feed a growing world population.
a separate report on food packaging for developing countries also prepared for the save food! congress noted that appropriate packaging is a key factor impacting on losses occurring at almost every stage of the food chain.


    Source :fao.org     Date : 11  May   2011    Category : food industries Economic


top food firms interested in novel food freshness label, entrepreneur

a scottish entrepreneur claims that two top food manufacturers and a major supermarket have shown interest in licensing an innovative colour-changing label that tells consumers how fresh their food is, which could be used on products within 12 months. the uwi label: appearing on a supermarket shelf near you within 12-18 months? according to strathclyde university research, around 8. more

 Source : foodqualitynews.com   Date : 21 February 2011   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
uk organic food makers launch marketing drive

uk organic food makers have launched a marketing campaign they hope will improve consumer understanding of the sector and boost sales.the three-year “why i love organic” campaign, launched by sector body the organic trade board (otb), costs gbp2m (us$3.1m). half the investment has been put up by the organic industry with the rest coming from the eu. the campaign, which aims to “democratise” the organic sector by getting consumers to talk about why they buy organic products, is the first significant push by the sector in the uk. more

 Source : ausfoodnews.com.au   Date : 10 January 2011   Category : food industries Economic
organic food makers launch marketing drive

uk organic food makers have launched a marketing campaign they hope will improve consumer understanding of the sector and boost sales. the three-year \"why i love organic\" campaign, launched by sector body the organic trade board (otb), costs gbp2m (us$3.1m). half the investment has been put up by the organic industry with the rest coming from the eu. the campaign, which aims to \"democratise\" the organic sector by getting consumers to talk about why they buy organic products, is the first significant push by the sector in the uk. more

 Source : just-food.com   Date : 7 January 2011   Category : restaurants and Food industrie
half portions to count towards ‘five-a-day’

half-portions of fruit and vegetables in processed and other composite foods will count towards the target of ‘five-a-day’ under a new uk industry scheme. members of the uk food industry, including coca-cola, greencore, heinz, innocent, pepsico, and united biscuits, in addition to the british nutrition foundation, the food and drink federation, together with supermarkets wm morrison, marks and spencer, and tesco, agreed to the new guidelines which aim to help consumers increase their intake of fruit and vegetables. more

 Source : foodnavigator.com   Date : 1 August 2011   Category : Fruits And Vegetables
thorntons franchises retail future by closing 120 own store outlets

thorntons announced today that it plans to close at least 120 own stores, replacing many with franchised outlets, and will also seek savings of more than £2m a year by cutting supply chain costs. the stores will close over the next three years – with another 60 out of a total of 370 under review – and the chocolate firm will also outsource storage and distribution to dhl, cutting supply chain and central costs by more than £2m a year from 2012/13. more

 Source : foodanddrinkeurope.com   Date : 28 June 2011   Category : food industries Economic
wal-mart to make, sell healthier foods

wal-mart, the nation\'s largest grocer, says it will reformulate thousands of products to make them healthier and push its suppliers to do the same, joining first lady michelle obama\'s effort to combat childhood obesity. the first lady accompanied wal-mart executives thursday as they announced the effort in washington. more

 Source : klewtv.com   Date : 20 January 2011   Category : food industries Economic
ethnic cuisine wins out in uk but eu market remains ‘fragmented’

uk consumers are increasingly keen on ethnic cuisine, but the market in mainland europe remains ‘fragmented’, according to a new report from market research firm keynote. in its 2011 market report ethnic foods, keynote estimates that the uk market for ethnic foods and rice was worth around £1.64bn in 2009 – the latest year where figures are available – an increase of 10.4% on the previous year. more

 Source : foodanddrinkeurope.com   Date : 10 January 2011   Category : food industries Economic
trans fat limits lead to healthier foods

holy fish sticks! scientists finally have some good news about fat in our foods.contrary to fears, most food manufacturers and restaurants did not just swap one bad ingredient for another when they trimmed artery-clogging trans fats from products and menus, an analysis finds.even the french fry, a longtime dietary scourge, got a healthier remake. but there\'s still room for improvement, particularly for some items sold in supermarkets, which replaced heart-damaging trans fat with its unhealthy cousin, saturated fat. more

 Source : klewtv.com   Date : 27 May 2010   Category : Food And Health
organic food makers take heart from danish demand

there are encouraging signs for food makers making moves into organics with signs that scandinavian countries are bucking the 'flatlining' trend witnessed in the rest of europe. organic food sales from supermarkets and department stories in denmark rose to €671m in 2008, marking a 29 per cent vertical rise on the year before, show figures from danish business daily borsen . more

 Source : Food Ingredients Food Science - Additives, Flavours, Starch   Date : 10 June 2009   Category : Economic News
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