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UK to join global coalition to combat food waste

UK to join global coalition to combat food waste

The UK has this week confirmed its intention to join the UNFSS, which commits members to halve food waste globally by 2030. The UK joins the likes of Italy, Australia and the US in becoming a member.

An estimated 9.5 million tones of food are wasted every year in the UK, while more broadly, more than one-third of all produced food is wasted. The UK will share its expertise, namely through the research and workings of WRAP to help combat food waste at home and abroad.

Minister Rebecca Pow said: “The UK, where food waste has fallen 21% per person since 2007, is rightly recognised as a global leader in tackling both domestic and international food waste. Joining the UNFSS Coalition will enable us to work further with other countries to solve this enormous issue.”

The commitment forms part of the government’s Environmental Improvement Plan to build a “truly circular and sustainable economy”.

The Government published its food strategy in June 2022. The UK Government has maintained that the strategy does address the biggest systemic challenges across the food value chain, including rising food costs, childhood hunger, public health and environmental sustainability.

To this latter point, agriculture was the source of 10% of the UK’s emissions in 2019 and 47% of England’s methane emissions specifically in 2019, according to official Government figures. This makes it a key challenge on the road to net-zero. With 70% of England’s land used for farming, farming approaches also have a major knock-on impact on the state of nature across the country.

More than 200 large food businesses already measure their food waste as part of the WRAP-IGD Food Waste Reduction Roadmap and the strategy is consulting on ways to improve reporting on this topic for larger businesses.

Commenting on the announcement, Liz Goodwin, senior fellow and director of Food Loss and Waste at the World Resources Institute, said: “The UK has been a clear leader in tackling food loss and waste for many years, so I am delighted that it is joining the Food is Never Waste Coalition where it will be a clear role model for others and will help promote focus on this important issue.

“We are now just seven years away from 2030 and it is imperative that we all scale up our efforts to reduce food loss and waste, which is essential if we are to meet climate agreement targets and create a sustainable, resilient food system.”

 

Disposal discretions

The announcement is timely. New research based on a survey from Waitrose warns that almost three million households across the UK may not be disposing of food waste responsibly.

The survey found that while 61% of UK households acknowledge that food waste is damaging to the environment, just 21% have access to curbside food waste collection and therefore throw leftover food into general waste streams.

Almost half (43%) claimed that they mistrust their local authorities to deal with waste responsibility, while 29% claimed that separating food waste was “too much effort”.

John Lewis Partnership’s director of ethics and sustainability, Marija Rompani said: “When we throw food away, we waste the precious resources it’s taken to grow, package and transport it – and as it rots in landfill, it produces methane, a greenhouse gas more potent than carbon dioxide.

“The simple action of throwing food in the bin is therefore more damaging to our planet than people often realise. Ideally, we should strive to eliminate food waste entirely but if necessary, it’s critical that households that have access to curbside food waste collection actually use it.”

 

 


 

 

Source edie

 

Carbon footprint labels aim to steer more green buying

Carbon footprint labels aim to steer more green buying

Nutritional breakdowns, ethical trade branding, recycling information – and now estimates of a product’s climate impact.

Consumers across the globe are starting to see a new kind of information on goods packaging, indicating the level of planet-heating gases emitted by making the items they are buying.

This fresh wave of efforts at “carbon footprint” labelling is being praised by some as empowering consumers to help tackle climate change – but criticised by others as confusing at best, and greenwashing at worst.

Danielle Nierenberg, co-founder of Food Tank, a US-based think-tank, said a carbon-labelling system has “been in the works for a while” but companies needed time to research it properly, “so we’re just seeing it now”.

Numi Organic Tea, a California-based company that sources 130 ingredients from 26 countries, will start putting carbon labels on its teas this summer, after tracking their emissions since 2015.

 

Now is the time – consumers are interested. Even if they don’t know what a gram of carbon is, it begins to develop the carbon literacy in our consumers and in society writ large.

Jane Franch, vice president for strategic sourcing and sustainability, Numi Organic Tea

 

Figuring out the teas’ carbon footprint required studying farm management practices, processing equipment, energy use along the supply chain and more, said Jane Franch, company vice president for strategic sourcing and sustainability.

“That was the first step in our journey – wrapping our minds around what is the impact, and looking for places where we can reduce (it),” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The effort has included pushing tea factories to start using cleaner energy and more energy-efficient equipment, she explained.

Numi packaging will carry a label that includes a single, product-specific number: a kilogram of carbon-dioxide equivalent, broken down by ingredients, transport, packaging and even the energy required to boil water at a tea-drinker’s home.

“Now is the time – consumers are interested,” Franch said. “Even if they don’t know what a gram of carbon is, it begins to develop the carbon literacy in our consumers and in society writ large.”

Numi joins a growing group of companies that have begun carbon labelling, particularly in the United States and Europe – from brands including plant-based-meat producer Quorn to electronics maker Logitech and household goods giant Unilever.

There are also broader efforts, such as a global push announced in February for the cosmetics industry, which includes Estee Lauder Companies, Johnson & Johnson Consumer Health, L’Oréal Group and 33 others.

Some even want a system that is obligatory for all.

“Publishing the climate impact of food products should be mandatory and standardised, just as with nutrition labels,” said a spokesperson for Swedish oat milks producer Oatly, which is leading a petition to the German government on the issue.

Denmark and France are already looking at creating their own consumer carbon labels, while the European Union is aiming to come up with a draft for a broader eco-label by 2024.

 

‘No longer niche’

The food and beverage industry is at the centre of the push for carbon labelling, given its outsize climate impact.

The global food system accounts for about a third of carbon emissions, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation.

But until recently, most efforts to reduce food-related emissions focused on production, said Edwina Hughes, head of the Cool Food Pledge at the World Resources Institute (WRI).

“We’ve made loads of progress in the last 50 years, but we haven’t looked at consumption as much. That’s pretty significant – if you don’t look at shifting diets, you won’t get where you need to” in terms of curbing climate change, she said.

Some simple interventions appear to offer great potential.

For instance, adding messages at the top of menus nearly doubled the proportion of diners choosing plant-based dishes, according to WRI research published in February.

The Cool Food program runs a carbon labelling initiative that includes a “badge” on menu items, indicating that they meet nutritional standards and have a smaller carbon footprint than researchers say is needed to achieve key climate goals.

Panera Bread, which has 2,100 North American locations focusing on business lunches, was the first restaurant chain to adopt the badge, in 2020.

The company had measured its carbon footprint since 2016, but that information was not reaching consumers, said Sara Burnett, its vice president of food beliefs and sustainability.

“We know there are two sides to this coin – what we choose to put on the menu, how we source.

But the flip-side is consumers: they really impact our business significantly by what they choose,” she added.

About half of Panera’s online menu options carry the badge, with a goal of raising that to 60 per cent by 2025, including by working with supply chain vendors and developing new products.

“This is no longer something that is just the niche green consumers looking for responsibly sourced and raised products,” Burnett said. “It’s the everyday consumer that is now looking for that.”

And consumers are starting to take notice, said Carmen Castillo, assistant general manager at MOM’s Organic Market in Rockville, Maryland, near Washington DC.

“It’s a newer label, and it creates conversation – people want to know what it means, if it’s real and how it affects them,” she added.

 

Too much information?

Little is yet known about how consumers react to carbon labels, although globally 54 per cent of respondents to a 2021 survey by environmental consultancy Carbon Trust said they would be more likely to pick a product with such a label over a similar one without.

Burnett said Cool Food-branded meals have sparked a particularly positive response on social media.

Yet some worry the flurry of efforts could muddy the waters.

“This is a confusing time for consumers because there are all of these labels,” said Food Tank’s Nierenberg.

Many labels and certifications “put so much onus on the consumers” to understand and act, she said, warning of an increased risk of greenwashing or “climate-washing”.

According to the European Commission, there are more than 450 environmental labels in use globally today, including about 80 reporting initiatives and methods for carbon emissions.

“Some of these … are reliable, some not,” it said in an online policy document.

Brands, too, are expressing concern.

“What we need is the adoption of a harmonised, global standard for eco-labelling so people don’t get information overload,” said Archana Jagannathan, senior director of sustainability for PepsiCo Europe, in emailed comments.

But too much focus on how labelling shapes buying behaviour may be missing the point, warned Michael P. Vandenbergh, director of the Climate Change Research Network at the Nashville-based Vanderbilt Law School.

As carbon labelling sees substantial growth worldwide, there is evidence it works “even if consumer responses are limited”, he noted.

Amid rising pressure from investors, governments, employees and clients, simply having a label can push companies to find efficiencies that reduce their carbon footprint, he said.

Already 80 per cent of the biggest firms in seven of the largest global sectors – including retail stores, auto manufacturing and lumber production – put environmental requirements in their supply-chain contracting, he added.

Carbon labelling is not a panacea, Vandenbergh said.

“But (it) is a piece of a much larger system that can function even if the national government process is inadequate – which it is,” he added.

This story was published with permission from Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, climate change, resilience, women’s rights, trafficking and property rights. Visit http://news.trust.org/climate.

 


 

Source Eco Business