| Literature DB >> 29644218 |
Karen A Cooper1, Tom E Quested2, Helene Lanctuit1, Diane Zimmermann1, Namy Espinoza-Orias1, Anne Roulin1.
Abstract
The UK currently has the most detailed, directly measured data for food wasted in the home. This includes information on the exact types of food wasted. These data allow calculation of the nutrients within that waste, as well as its environmental impact. The results progress the conversation beyond how much food is wasted or its energy content; it permits the implications for nutrition and sustainability to be assessed in detail. Data for UK household food waste were expressed as an average waste per capita for each type of food. Each food type was matched with an item (or group of items) from the UK Composition of Foods (7th Ed). The level of nutrients wasted was compared to UK Reference Nutrient Intakes (RNIs) for adult women (19-50 years, used as a proxy for general population requirements). The data were normalized into "nutrient days" wasted per capita per year, then into the number of complete diet days (for 21 nutrients plus energy). Results show that approximately 42 daily diets were discarded per capita per year. By individual nutrient, the highest losses were vitamin B12, vitamin C, and thiamin (160, 140, and 130 nutrient days/capita/year, respectively). For protein, dietary energy and carbohydrates, 88, 59, and 53 nutrient days/capita/year, respectively, were lost. Substantial losses were also found for under-consumed nutrients in the UK: calcium, which was mostly lost via bakery (27%) and dairy/eggs (27%). Food folate was mainly lost through fresh vegetables/salads (40%) and bakery (18%), as was dietary fiber (31 and 29%, respectively). Environmental impacts were distributed over the food groups, with wasted meat and fish the single largest contribution. For all environmental impacts studied, the largest contribution came from agricultural production. This paper shows that there are areas where interventions preventing food waste and promoting healthy eating could work together (e.g., encouraging consumption of vegetables or tackling overbuying, especially of unhealthy foods). Food manufacturers and retailers, alongside governments and NGOs, have a key role to minimize waste of environmentally impactful, nutrient-dense foods, for instance, by helping influence people's behaviors with appropriate formulation of products, packaging, portioning, use of promotions, or public education.Entities:
Keywords: environmental impact; food waste; life cycle assessment; nutrient deficiencies; nutrition security; sustainability
Year: 2018 PMID: 29644218 PMCID: PMC5882835 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00019
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Scope of the assessment, covering life cycle stages from “cradle to grave.” Grayed and dashed elements are excluded from the system boundaries.
Figure 2Edible household food waste by weight in the UK in 2012, separated by food category. WRAP data were classified as of time of calculation however, future alignment to the Food Loss and Waste Standard (15) is envisaged, which will likely create minor differences between edible and non-edible differentiation.
Figure 3The amounts of individual nutrients wasted per capita per year in UK (in Nutrient days based either on UK-RNIs or on USA-RDAs). There is no bar for vitamins E and K for the UK as no RNI exist for these two vitamins. Results for vitamins D, E, and K not used for calculating the number of complete daily diets wasted (see text for more explanation). The arrow indicates the 42 daily diets, limited by fiber.
Figure 4Amount of absolute wasted (A) calcium, (B) food folate, (C) iron, and (D) fiber, by food grouping per capita per day.
Environmental impacts of edible food waste in the UK at a larger scale.
| Functional unit (FU) | Climate change | Abiotic resource depletion | Impacts on ecosphere/ecosystem quality | Land use biodiversity impacts | Freshwater consumption scarcity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (kg CO2-eq/FU) | (kg Sb-eq/FU) | (PDF × m2 × year/FU) | (PDF × m2 × year/FU) | (m3-eq/FU) | |
| Per capita, per day | 8.8E−01 | 3.2E−03 | 6.8E−02 | 7.0E−01 | 9.0E−01 |
| Per capita, weekly | 6.1E + 00 | 2.3E−02 | 4.8E−01 | 4.9E + 00 | 6.3E + 00 |
| Per capita, annually | 3.2E + 02 | 1.2E + 00 | 2.5E + 01 | 2.6E + 02 | 3.3E + 02 |
| UK, annually | 2.0E + 10 | 7.5E + 07 | 1.6E + 09 | 1.6E + 10 | 2.1E + 10 |
Relative contribution per food group to overall nutritional content and environmental impact of edible UK household food wasted.
Shading of cells indicates relative contribution of food group to each metric of impact.
Figure 5Relative contribution of the life-cycle stages to environmental impacts associated with UK household food waste.