Cold Link Africa September 2019 | Page 41

FEATURE We need to stop wasting food! By Ilana Koegelenberg It is estimated that a third of our food is wasted (often due to poor refrigeration) – how big is this problem really at consumer level, and what can (and should) be done about it? COLD LINK AFRICA • SEPTEMBER 2019 greenhouse gas emissions) generated during the production, harvesting, processing, distribution and disposal of food that is not consumed. All households, irrespective of income level, contribute to food waste. Studies have found a direct relationship between household food waste generation, household income and the number of people residing in a household. Food waste decreases when there are more occupants, yet increases with household income level. As such, households in wealthier countries tend to generate more food waste than those in developing countries; while in all cases there are significant economic costs associated with food waste. But the problem is far bigger. The wasted embedded water would fill over 600 000 Olympic swimming pools – a massive waste for South Africa, the 30th driest country on the planet. Also, about 90% of waste in SA is disposed of to landfills, where the food- waste component leads to the production of methane gas and carbon dioxide. According to the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FOA), without accounting for greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from land use change, the carbon footprint of food produced and not eaten is estimated to 3.3 G tonnes of CO 2 -equivalent: as such, food wastage ranks as the third top emitter after USA and China. Globally, the blue water footprint (which is the consumption of surface and groundwater resources) of food wastage is about 250km 3 , which is equivalent to G lobal estimates suggest that the world population will reach 9.6 billion by 2050. At current lifestyle patterns, it is estimated that we will need the equivalent of nearly three planets to sustain the world population in 2050. Increasing food production to ensure food security will put additional pressure on already constrained natural resources. Yet, it is estimated that between a third and a half of all food produced globally never reaches the point of human consumption. An estimated 1.3 billion tonnes of food is wasted globally each year – one third of all food produced for human consumption – according to the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations. The amount of food lost or wasted costs UDD2.6-trillion annually. and is more than enough to feed all the 815 million hungry people in the world – four times over! It is ethically unacceptable to waste food that could be used to feed people. In South Africa, 12 million people (24.5% of the national population) go to bed hungry each day, and it is reported that South Africa has the largest proportion of food wastage in Africa. Food waste can be seen as having a triple negative impact: 1. the waste of resources (including water and energy) used along the supply chain in the production, handling and distribution of food that is not consumed by humans; 2. the socio-economic impacts associated with food insecurity; and 3. environmental impacts associated with waste and emissions (including The CSIR’s estimated food wastage in South Africa by commodity group. three times the volume of Lake Geneva. Finally, produced but uneaten food vainly occupies almost 1.4 billion hectares of land; this represents close to 30% of the world’s agricultural land area. While it is difficult to estimate impacts on biodiversity at a global level, food wastage unduly compounds the negative externalities that mono-cropping and agriculture expansion into wild areas create on biodiversity loss, including mammals, birds, fish and amphibians. The loss of land, water and biodiversity, as well as the negative impacts of climate change, represent huge costs to society that are yet to be quantified. The direct economic cost of food wastage of agricultural products (excluding fish and seafood), based on producer prices only, is about USD750-billion, equivalent to the GDP of Switzerland. With such figures, it seems clear that a reduction of food wastage at global, regional, and national scales would have a substantial positive effect on natural and societal resources. Food wastage reduction would not only avoid pressure on scarce natural resources but also decrease the need to raise food production by 60% in order to meet the 2050 population demand. SOUTH AFRICAN PROBLEM IN NUMBERS Food waste is becoming an important issue in light of population growth and global food security concerns. However, data on food wastage is limited, especially for developing www.coldlinkafrica.co.za 41