Current location:home page > Marketing

New Zealand joins global fight against food waste

admin3 days agoMarketing15
 New Zealand is the latest nation to join the global fight against food waste with the Love Food Ha…
 New Zealand is the latest nation to join the global fight against food waste with the Love Food Hate Waste campaign launching on 1 June.
 
Love Food Hate Waste is a collaboration between the Waste Management Institute New Zealand (WasteMINZ), the Ministry for the Environment and 59 councils from around New Zealand, with the aim to reduce the amount of food households are sending to landfill each year.
 
In New Zealand, households throw away 122,547 tonnes of food annually at a cost of $872 million. That is enough food to feed the population of Dunedin for two years. The average Kiwi family wastes more than three shopping trolleys of food, which they throw away each year uneaten.
 
Food waste is a rising topic on the global agenda with United Nations Environmental Programme estimating that one third of the food produced globally for human consumption is wasted. That equates to 1.3 billion tonnes of food which is never consumed, yet 795 million people worldwide are malnourished.
 
Last year UN leaders dined on a banquet of food that would have otherwise been wasted to highlight how food waste is an overlooked aspect of climate change. If food waste was a country, it would be the third largest emitter of greenhouse gases behind China and the United States.
 
These facts have spurred a global movement to reduce food waste with the United States calling for a 50% reduction of its national food waste by 2030. It is now illegal for supermarkets in France to throw away unsold food. Instead they must donate edible food to charities who distribute it to those in need.
 
Auckland Deputy Mayor Penny Hulse says the Love Food Hate Waste campaign can have a positive impact on both household finances and the environment.
 
“New Zealanders have embraced the recycling message – although there is always more we can do to prevent waste to landfill,” said Hulse.
 
In addition to the Love Food Hate Waste website, there will be events happening around the country over the course of the three-year campaign to get people involved in combatting food waste. The first of these is the Great Persimmon Rescue in the Waikato on Sunday 5 June.
 
Waikato Councils will work with volunteers and Community Fruit Harvesting to pick 20 tonnes of persimmons that would otherwise be left to rot in the orchard. The fruit, along with information on how to store and eat it, will be distributed to food banks in the region. Countdown is supporting the initiative by supplying a truck to transport the fruit to the Auckland City Mission.
 
The Love Food Hate Waste website, which will also launch on 1 June, will feature helpful tips, storage guides and recipes, including recipes from Annabel Langbein, Allyson Gofton and Dr Libby Weaver.

Related articles

Chile's dehydrated plum enters India

A few months ago, at the 10th Dry Plums EXPO, Pedro Pablo Díaz, the president of Chileprunes stresse…

Chile's dehydrated plum enters India

A few months ago, at the 10th Dry Plums EXPO, Pedro Pablo Díaz, the president of Chileprunes stresse…

Grape prices have inexplicably started to fall too quickly in the Spanish market

The Spanish table grape campaign is ahead of schedule this year. After two weeks of good sales, pric…

New export programme to boost UK dairy industry

The UK’s dairy industry is set to be boosted by a brand-new programme to increase exports, the Gover…

Minimum export price of $800 per ton imposed on Indian onions

This weekend, the Indian government imposed a minimum export price (MEP) of $800 per ton on onion ex…

Nestlé, Cargill and CCm Technologies launch collaborative pilot to turn cocoa shells into low carbon

Nestlé UK & Ireland and Cargill have launched a regenerative agriculture initiative, a UK supply…