Gone to waste (Full Version)

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Level -> Gone to waste (5/18/2008 11:03:40 AM)

quote:

The Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) found that salad, fruit and bread were most commonly wasted and 60% of all dumped food was untouched.  

The study analysed the waste disposed of by 2,138 households.  

Environment Minister Joan Ruddock said the findings were "staggering" at a time of global food shortages and WRAP added it was an environmental issue.


http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk/7389351.stm


quote:

Grocery bills are rising through the roof. Food banks are running short of donations. And food shortages are causing sporadic riots in poor countries through the world.

You’d never know it if you saw what was ending up in your landfill. As it turns out, Americans waste an astounding amount of food — an estimated 27 percent of the food available for consumption, according to a government study — and it happens at the supermarket, in restaurants and cafeterias and in your very own kitchen. It works out to about a pound of food every day for every American.

Grocery stores discard products because of spoilage or minor cosmetic blemishes. Restaurants throw away what they don’t use. And consumers toss out everything from bananas that have turned brown to last week’s Chinese leftovers. In 1997, in one of the few studies of food waste, the Department of Agriculture estimated that two years before, 96.4 billion pounds of the 356 billion pounds of edible food in the United States was never eaten. Fresh produce, milk, grain products and sweeteners made up two-thirds of the waste. An update is under way.


http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/18/weekinreview/18martin.html?ref=weekinreview




pahunkboy -> RE: Gone to waste (5/18/2008 11:07:24 AM)

When I served in Americore we got PA law changed to -stop lawsuits so as more food to flow to the needy. it went well for a while then fizzled out.

watch what you buy, i am finding more stale stuff.   i know someone that used to look up the date codes to see if the product was fresh.

there is alot of waste.  the thing is- much of it can be fed to livestock.....even when it molds...




FullCircle -> RE: Gone to waste (5/18/2008 11:52:43 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Level
The Waste & Resources Action Programme (WRAP) found that salad, fruit and bread were most commonly wasted and 60% of all dumped food was untouched.  

The study analysed the waste disposed of by 2,138 households.  

Environment Minister Joan Ruddock said the findings were "staggering" at a time of global food shortages and WRAP added it was an environmental issue.


Did they then use anti terrorism laws to establish who was wasting what so they could issue them with a diet action plan?

That is what I have come to expect.




Quivver -> RE: Gone to waste (5/18/2008 11:59:28 AM)

It used to be that when perishables were pulled from the shelves at grochers local farmers were able to pick it up for livestock food.  But that practice went by the way side when poor families began to call themselves farmers and fed their familys with it.  Like so many things this had a snow ball effect on a lot of family farms who had to cut back on what they
fed to produce fresh protine for their familys too.  They just couldnt afford to buy feed from the Mills.  Laws go into effect
to protect us yet laws rarely have common sense to lead them. 

This isnt just the grochers but anywhere food is.   They can only keep it for so long, then they are required to throw it away. 
I'm not sure if it's greed or the lack of common sense that drives it all, either way it's sad. 




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