19 Apr 2018

Europe tackling its 88m tonne food waste problem

2:15 pm on 19 April 2018

European lawmakers took a major step toward slashing the amount of perfectly edible food that is discarded, costing billions of dollars a year and depriving millions of people who struggle to find enough food to eat.

Beth Hampton is on a mission to feed our hungry planet.

Beth Hampton is on a mission to feed our hungry planet. Photo: CC BY-NC 2.0

The European Parliament in Strasbourg backed a law urging member states to halve food waste by 2030, requiring them to report food waste levels yearly from 2020 and provide incentives for collecting and redistributing unsold food.

"I'm very pleased with the outcome because it is the first time that we have a European legislation on food waste," said MEP Simona Bonafe, a member of the European Parliament's environment committee.

"In this regulation, you have for the first time binding measures that member states have to take to tackle food waste," said Bonafe, who was charged with drafting the text.

It becomes law after approval by ministers - a formality - and is published in the official journal.

The food waste goals are part of the European Commission's Circular Economy Package, a broader legal framework aimed at fostering sustainable growth and includes recycling targets.

Globally, one third of all food produced, worth nearly $1 trillion, is wasted every year, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Europe's plan to halve food waste by 2030 is in line with the UN sustainable development goals to address global issues such as hunger. But campaigners, while hailing the vote, said the law does not go far enough.

Martin Bowman of Britain-based This is Rubbish said the 50 percent target is not binding, meaning nations would not face penalties for failing.

"This will transform the fight against food waste," he said.

It is estimated that 88 million tonnes of food is wasted in Europe annually - at a cost of €EU143 billion ($NZ241 billion). Meanwhile, 55 million people around the world struggle to find food, campaigners say.

A US study published on Wednesday found American consumers waste nearly half a kilogram of food per person each day - the equivalent of four portions of chicken, four quarter-pound meat patties or a pint of blueberries.

Higher quality diets with large amounts of fruits and vegetables are also associated with greater amounts of food waste, wasted irrigation water and pesticides, it said.

- Reuters