Garbage
University of New South Wales
Two UNSW experts have called on industry and consumers to do more to prevent high levels of waste in the food supply chain.
Urgent changes are needed to solve the
increasing problem of lost and wasted food, according to UNSW experts.
A recent report from the Australia Institute highlighted
the fact that more than 7.5m tonnes of food is wasted in this country each
year, costing households in excess of $19 billion.
That is in addition to figures from the UN
Food and Agriculture Organisation which say around 30 per cent of all food produced globally is lost
or wasted.
Professor Johannes le Coutre, who is responsible for the
UNSW Food program, says the food industry needs to do more to reduce waste –
but he also urges consumers to be more mindful of throwing away perfectly good
food.
“This is a problem that needs to be addressed. There is no doubt about it,” said Prof. le Coutre during an appearance on UNSW’s Engineering the Future podcast series.
“We are indeed wasting 30 per cent of our
food. And this is something that's happening all over the value chain and all
over the food system. In the agricultural pursuit of food, material is wasted,
certainly in the food processing and in the industrial ways of making food
available for procurement, material is wasted.
“But we also have to look in the mirror at
home. Everybody is wasting food. I make this blunt statement, and we need to
address this at all levels.”
Food security
Prof. le Coutre mentioned the efforts of
Ronni Kahn, founder of OzHarvest – Australia’s leading food
rescue organisation, which prevents surplus food ending up in landfill and
instead delivers to charities that help feed people in need. “Ronni continues
to make a fantastic effort to stop food waste at all levels,” the academic from
the School of Chemical Engineering added.
Similarly, local grass roots organisations
such as Addison
Road Community Organisation’s War on Waste provide food, otherwise
wasted, to people experiencing food insecurity: people living with severe
mental illness, unemployment, refugees and the homeless.
But Prof. le Coutre says more needs to be
done by everybody in society given the huge levels of wastage, not least in the
current economic climate where the cost of living continues to surge, and more
and more people are struggling to be able to afford food.
Joining Prof. le Coutre on the Engineering
the Future of Food podcast episode is UNSW Conjoint Professor Katherine Samaras, a
specialist physician and translational clinical scientist in endocrinology and
metabolism.
In addition to her conjoint appointment,
she is a senior staff specialist at St Vincent's Hospital, and leads the
Clinical Obesity, Nutrition and Adipose Biology Laboratory at the Garvan
Institute of Medical Research.
Prof. Samaras agrees that food wastage is a
worrying problem that needs to be addressed across the whole of society.
“Yes, there are restaurateurs who will give
their leftover food to charities and so forth, but we are really lacking the
kind of leadership we need to have a societal level reduction in food wastage,”
she said.
“As an example, very recently the news
featured a young farmer who had a huge harvest of pumpkins that were too small
for one of the major supermarket chains. So, they sent them back.
“What was he going to do, plough them into
the ground? What are his distribution networks? What are the alternatives? We
need economic pathways for food that is imperfect, for food that is too small
or blemished.
“We have to stop the kind of food wastage
where supermarkets dictate consumer expectations of a perfect-looking and
likely expensive pumpkin or avocado. We have to stop ploughing these foods into
the ground.”
Simultaneous hunger and obesity
During the podcast episode, as well as
discussing future food solutions, such as alternative forms of protein like
insects, algae and lab-grown meat, Prof. le Coutre and Prof. Samaras also
highlight a current paradox – that within the same small regions there can
often be problems with obesity as equally as problems with hunger.
“What concerns me is that there are people
who just cannot get enough food today. And in other countries, some people are
drowning in over-nutrition,” Prof. Samaras said.
“Medical practitioners, allied health
professionals, we're all, at an individual level, trying to address what are
societal, national and global issues around the disparity of food distribution.
And underlying this are the economic financial factors that actually drive that
disparity.
“There is enough food to feed the world.
But people in high Gross Domestic Product nations seem to have all the access.
In comparison, there are people in lower GDP nations, and even though they are
often resource-rich, they have no buying power in the international markets to
access food."
Prof. le Coutre added that simultaneous
hunger and over-nutrition is not unique to developing nations, but can be
noticed quite easily in and around Australia.
“We do have under-nutrition and hunger and
obesity often at the same time in the same geography, which is a problem,” he
said.
“The challenge for the future will be to address this by providing healthy food for everybody and to enable, as well, the purchasing power. We need to make sure that the United Nations Sustainability Development Goal 1, 'No Poverty', goes together with Sustainability Development Goal 2, 'Zero Hunger', so that there's enough purchasing power in societies so that everybody can provide him or herself with food.”