By ecoRI
News staff
Food is
an essential element of daily life — you would be hard-pressed to find a social
setting where there isn’t food.
It’s in restaurants and street-side stands,
grocery stores and farmers markets, hospitals and office buildings, and of
course, in our homes. But, did you know that food waste is a huge share of what
we toss out every day?
It amounts to 320,000 tons of waste annually in
Connecticut alone.
Americans
throw out as much as 20 pounds of food per person per month at a cost of more
than $2,000 a year per household. A 2012 National Resources Defense Council report showed that food is wasted at every
step along the way from farm to table — beginning in the fields with the
harvesting process, then at both the packaging and retail levels, and finally
from our plates.
Fortunately,
there are many ways we can reduce this waste. Restaurants, cafeterias and
businesses that prepare or sell food can follow the 3Rs — reduce, reuse and
recycle — starting with finding ways to reduce kitchen scrap and unused food.
There are computerized food tracking systems such as LeanPath that
focus on prevention. Food waste is measured daily and an analysis of why it was
thrown away is provided — spoilage, trim waste and/or overproduction.
There
will always be times, however, when too much has been prepared or there is more
than can be sold. Donating unused food to local organizations that feed the
hungry is an excellent reuse option. It not only helps those in need, but can
be a tax benefit to your business.
The Federal
Food Donation Act of 2008 protects
against liability when donating to a nonprofit. In Connecticut, Community Plates is an example of a donation
organization.
Recycling
food waste is also better than putting it in the Dumpster. This includes
composting it onsite or at a commercial facility. Three composting facilities
in Connecticut are currently permitted to receive food scrap, and a few
anaerobic digesters are expected to be proposed in the near future. A new state
law requires certain commercial businesses, such as food wholesalers and
supermarkets, to separate organic materials and ensure they are recycled; its
intent is to spur development of more processing facilities where food scrap
can be recycled.
Another
food recycling option is to contact local animal farmers about taking scrap for
animal feed.
At home
we can cut down on food scrap by planning meals and making a shopping list
before heading to the store, and by checking the fridge to assess what’s in
there so you don’t buy more unnecessarily. Also “Sell-by” and “Use-by” dates
are not an indicator of food safety, but rather of a manufacturer’s suggestion
for peak quality.
Here is
a look at what some Connecticut institutions are doing to lessen the amount of
food scrap that is buried or burned:
Yale-New
Haven Hospital and St. Rafael’s started donating food six
months ago through Rock and Wrap It Up! More than 6,500 pounds of food,
equaling 5,000 meals, have gone to feed the hungry at St. Anne’s Soup Kitchen,
Community Soup Kitchen, Beth El Center and Christ Church. And, close to 5,000
pounds of carbon dioxide emissions have been eliminated.
The
Connecticut Children’s
Medical Center uses Aramark’s food tracking system. it has reduced the cost of
produce by 18 percent through eliminating waste during kitchen preparation.
Food waste is currently 8 percent of the total waste produced, with a goal of 4
percent for the future.
Mohegan
Sun Casino has been sending food scrap to a local pig farm,
and averages nearly 1,200 tons diverted annually.
Community
Plates has “reused” 4.5
million pounds of food from 86 food donor restaurants, markets and farms. This
food has gone to 50 receiving agencies — soup kitchens, food pantries and
homeless shelters). Fairway Market in Stamford has donated 450,000 meals since
September 2011.
This
story originally appeared in the Connecticut Department of Energy & Environmental
Protection’s spring 2014 newsletter. Department headquarters has been composting some 6,000 pounds of
food scrap annually from employee lunches and snacks onsite for the past
decade.