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Food Loss and Waste is Ethical Outrage


Tue 29 Sep 2020 | 09:58 AM
Ahmad El-Assasy

Food loss and waste is an ethical outrage.  In a world with enough food to feed all people, everywhere, 690 million people continue to go hungry and 3 billion cannot afford a healthy diet.

Food loss and waste also squander natural resources – water, soil, and energy, not to mention human labor and time.  It worsens climate change, given the significant role of agriculture in generating greenhouse gas emissions.

International concern is reflected in Sustainable Development Goal 2, which enshrines a commitment to achieving zero hunger, and in SDG 12, which calls on us to halve food waste and reduce food loss by 2030. While many countries are taking action, we need to step up efforts.

The COVID-19 pandemic has underlined the fragility of our food systems and worsened food loss and waste in many countries.  We need new approaches and solutions.

This inaugural observance of the International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste comes as we prepare for the 2021 Food Systems Summit.

I urge countries to set a reduction target aligned with SDG 12, measure their food loss and waste, and act boldly to reduce it. Policy action in this area should also be included in climate plans under the Paris Agreement.

Many businesses should take a similar approach.  Inpiduals can shop carefully, store food correctly, and make good use of leftovers.

Let us work together to reduce food loss for the benefit of people and our planet.

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