| Literature DB >> 31362396 |
Rovshen Ishangulyyev1, Sanghyo Kim2, Sang Hyeon Lee3.
Abstract
The Food and Agricultural Organization (FAO) reported that approximately one-third of all produced foods (1.3 billion tons of edible food) for human consumption is lost and wasted every year across the entire supply chain. Significant impacts of food loss and waste (FLW) have increased interest in establishing prevention programs around the world. This paper aims to provide an overview of FLW occurrence and prevention. Economic, political, cultural, and socio-demographic drivers of FLW are described, highlighting the global variation. This approach might be particularly helpful for scientists, governors, and policy makers to identify the global variation and to focus on future implications. The main focus here was to identify the cause of the FLW occurrence throughout the food supply chain. We have created a framework for FLW occurrence at each stage of the food supply chain. Several feasible solutions are provided based on the framework.Entities:
Keywords: food loss; food security; food waste; waste management; waste prevention
Year: 2019 PMID: 31362396 PMCID: PMC6723314 DOI: 10.3390/foods8080297
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Definitions of Food Loss and Waste.
| Concepts | Definitions |
|---|---|
| Food Loss (by FAO) | Decrease in weight (dry matter) or quality (nutritional value) of food that was originally produced for human consumption |
| Food Waste (by FAO) | Food appropriate for human consumption being discarded, whether after it is left to spoil or kept beyond its expiry date |
| Food Waste (by FUSIONS EU) | Any food and its inedible parts, removed from the FSC to be disposed (including composted, crops ploughed in or not harvested, anaerobic digestion, bio-energy production, co-generation, incineration, disposal to sewer, landfill or discarded to sea) or recovered |
| Food Loss (by High Level Panel of Experts) | A decrease, at all stages of the FSC prior to the consumer level, in mass of food that was originally intended for human consumption, regardless of the cause |
| Food Waste (by High Level Panel of Experts) | food appropriate for human consumption being discarded or left to spoil at consumer level—regardless of the cause |
| Food Loss and Waste (by United States Department of Agriculture) | FW is a subcomponent of FL and occurs when an edible food goes unconsumed. The food which is still edible at the time of discard is considered as food waste |
FAO: Food and Agriculture Organization; FUSIONS EU: Food Use for Social Innovation by Optimising Waste Prevention Strategies EU; EU: European Union; FSC: food supply chain; FW: Food Waste; FL: food loss.
Figure 1Framework of Food Loss and Waste (FLW) definitions.
Summary of similarities and differences of definitions.
| Decrease in Quantity or Quality of Food | Considering External Causes | FW Subset of FL | Stages of FSC Include FL | Stages of FSC Include FW | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FAO | + | + | First 3 stages | Last 2 stages | |
| FUSIONS EU | + | + | None of them | All | |
| HLPE | + | First 4 stages | Last stage | ||
| USDA | + | + | + | All | Last 2 stages |
HLPE: High Level Panel of Experts; USDA: United States Department of Agriculture.
Estimated quantities of FLW by area.
| Area | Type | Amount | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Global | FLW | 614 kcal/person each day | [ |
| Global | FLW | 1.6 billion tons annually | [ |
| Australia | FLW | 4.06 million tons annually | [ |
| Australia | FLW | 637 kg/capita annually (2014–2015) | [ |
| China | FLW | 70% is FLW of total municipal solid waste (MSW) | [ |
| China | FW | 90 million tons (51% of MSW) | [ |
| Denmark | FLW | 700,000 tons annually | [ |
| England | FW | 16% of edible calories or 15% of edible drink and food purchases | [ |
| Finland | FW | 23 kg/person/year | [ |
| Italy | FL | 17.7 tons (3.25% of total production) | [ |
| Italy | FW | 40,000 tons annually | [ |
| Japan | FLW | 37.86 million tons in 2011 | [ |
| New Zealand | FW | 148 kg/household/year | [ |
| Nordic countries | FLW | 40,000–83,000 tons annually | [ |
| Singapore | FLW | 788,600 tons (0.39 kg/day) in 2014 | [ |
| Singapore | FLW | 809,800 tons in 2017 | [ |
| South Africa | FLW | 177 kg/person annually | [ |
| Switzerland | FLW | 48% of total calories | [ |
| United Kingdom | FW | 4.2 million tons annually | [ |
| United States | FW | 34.69 million tons annually | [ |
| United States | FW | 35.5 million tons annually | [ |
Summary the economic cost of FLW.
| Type | Area | Value | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consumption | United Kingdom | $852.6 (€580) per household annually | [ |
| Consumption | United Kingdom | $18.3 billion annually | [ |
| Consumption | United States | $1410 average per household annually | [ |
| Consumption | New Zealand | $873 million annually | [ |
| Retail and consumption | United States | $165.6 billion annually, $390 per capita | [ |
| Retail and consumption | Germany | $331 per capita | [ |
| All stages | Canada | $21.1 billion annually | [ |
| All stages | Global | $750 billion annually | [ |
Notes: All values converted to USD.
Food Loss and Waste according to economy. Source: Lipinski et al. [6].
| FL | FW | FLW | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Developing countries | 30% | 14% | 44% |
| Developed countries | 21% | 35% | 56% |
Figure 2Portion of FLW in the stages of the food supply chain (FSC). Source: Lipinski et al. [6].
Possible causes of FLW at the production stage of FSC.
| Stage | Possible Causes of FLW | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Production Stage | - Infrastructural limitation | [ |
| - Over Production | [ | |
| - Harvesting timing | [ | |
| - Harvesting method (mechanical versus manual) | [ | |
| - Pesticides and fertilizers | [ | |
| - Economic problems | [ | |
| - Quality Standards | [ | |
| - Choice of variety | [ |
Possible causes of FLW at the Handling and Storage stage of the FSC.
| Stage | Possible Causes of FLW | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Handling and Storage Stage | - Degradation and spillage according to product characteristics | [ |
| - Transportation from farm to distribution | [ | |
| - Storage infrastructure | [ |
Possible causes of FLW at the processing and packaging stage of FSC.
| Stage | Possible Causes of FLW | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Processing and Packaging Stage | - Unavoidable losses | [ |
| - Technical inefficiencies and malfunctions | [ | |
| - Methods and changes in processing lines | [ | |
| - Contamination in processing lines | [ | |
| - Legislation restrictions | [ | |
| - Packaging system | [ | |
| - Overproduction | [ |
Possible causes of FLW at the distribution and marketing stage of FSC.
| Stage | Possible Causes of FLW | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Distribution and Marketing Stage | - Inappropriate conveyance conditions (temperature-controlled aircrafts and ships) | [ |
| - Contamination of transportation | [ | |
| - Transportation and market facilities | [ | |
| - Road and distribution vehicles | [ | |
| - Business Rule | [ | |
| - Packaging management | [ | |
| - Commercial conditions | [ | |
| - Consumer Reference | [ |
Possible causes of FLW at the consumption stage of FSC.
| Stage | Possible Causes of FLW | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Consumption Stage | - Household size and composition | [ |
| - Household income | [ | |
| - Household demographics | [ | |
| - Household culture | [ | |
| - Individual attitude | [ | |
| - Cooking process and method, storage in household, over cooking | [ |
Summarize of leading efforts.
| Organization (Country) and Initiative | Scope | Description |
|---|---|---|
| UN | Global | Achieving Goal 12 requires a strong national framework for sustainable consumption and production that is integrated into national and sectoral plans, sustainable business practices, and consumer behavior, together with adherence to international norms for the management of hazardous chemicals and wastes. |
| OECD | OECD countries | FCAN seeks participation by national experts from government ministries and related institutions providing policy analysis. |
| FAO, Messe Dusseldorf SAVE FOOD | Global | FAO and Messe Düsseldorf are cooperating with donors, financial institutions, bi- and multi-lateral agencies, and private sector partners to develop and implement the program on FLW reduction. |
| Meeting of G20 Agricultural Chief Scientists (MACS) | Regional | MACS has created a FLW web portal to provide a variety of FLW-related information. The next plan for MACS is to integrate the promising set of research findings, innovative technological solutions, and benchmark campaigns. |
| FAO, EU, AfDB APHLIS+ | Regional | APHLIS+ integrates a network of local experts who supply data, a shared database, and a calculator for losses. |
| APEC | Regional | APEC has maintained this project since 2013. Goals of this project are to address post-harvest losses at all stages of the entire food supply chain in the APEC region by strengthening public-private partnerships. |
| EU | Regional | FUSIONS is a project working toward greater resource efficiency by significantly reducing food waste. |
| United Kingdom | National | WRAP helps people recycle more and waste less, at work and at home, which are practices that have economic and environmental benefits. |
| United States | National | Launched in 2011. The FRC is designed for organizations searching to track their FLW reduction activities. |
| United States | National | Launched in 2013, the USFWC is designed for organizations seeking to make a public pledge or disclosure of their activities to reduce FLW. |
| United States | National | Launched in 2016, USFLW is businesses and organizations that have made a public commitment to reduce FLW. |
| France | National | France introduced legislation for supermarkets banning the waste of unused and unsold foods. France became a leading country in preventing FW. |
FRC: Food Recovery Challenge; SDGs: Sustainable Development Goals; OECD: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; FCAN: Food Chain Analysis Network; APHLIS+: African Postharvest Losses Information System; APEC: Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation; PPP: public-private partnerships; WRAP: Waste and Resources Action Program; USFWC: U.S. Food Waste Challenge; USFLW: U.S. Food Loss and Waste 2030 Champions.
Possible strategies to prevent the FLW at different stages of FSC.
| Stage | Strategy |
|---|---|
| Production Stage | Government investments in infrastructure |
| Improve harvesting techniques | |
| Improve market access | |
| Organize extension services and educate farmers | |
| Increase tax incentives for donating unsellable edible foods | |
| Handling and Storage Stage | Improve transportation facilities |
| Provide access to cheap handling and storage technologies | |
| Invest in storage facilities (warehouses, cold storage, etc.) | |
| Improve the ability and knowledge of workers to employ safe food handling practice | |
| Use of appropriate and clean containers for the products | |
| Processing and Packaging Stage | Improve capacity of process line |
| Improve packaging to keep food fresher for longer | |
| Standardize date labels to prevent consumer confusion | |
| Establish other ways to use peels and trimmings | |
| Improve the knowledge and ability of workers | |
| Facilitate sanitary and cleaning inspections | |
| Distribution and Marketing Stage | Improve inventory systems |
| Establish online marketplaces to facilitate sale (donation) of perishable products | |
| Change food date labeling practices and in-store promotions | |
| Improve institutions related to this stage | |
| Improve transportation vehicles | |
| Provide guidance on storage and preparation of food to consumers | |
| Improve the knowledge and ability of workers | |
| Improve market places (storage, covered areas) | |
| Interlink with research institutions to predict consumer demand changes | |
| Consumption Stage | Facilitate increased donation of unsold foods from cafeterias and restaurants |
| Implement consumer education and campaigns, both nationally and regionally | |
| Reduce portion sizes | |
| Provide education about home economics in education institutions and communities | |
| Involve women in food safe campaigns | |
| Effective use of leftovers | |
| Training for restaurant, cafeteria, and supermarket management to forecast customer demand and reflect demand in food purchasing to avoid bulk purchases | |
| Implement good storage practices | |
| Correctly interpret label dates | |
| Distribution of excess food to charitable groups |