The Landscape of Food Waste in Canada | Second Harvest
摘要
TLDRCanada's food loss and waste problem is alarming, with 35.5 million tonnes lost annually, enough to feed the population for five months. Approximately 58% of food is wasted while 5.6 million Canadians suffer from food insecurity. Food waste contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, primarily due to methane created from landfill food waste. The supply chain's production, processing, and retail stages account for most waste, exacerbated by labor issues, aesthetic standards, and consumer behavior regarding best before dates. Households also contribute significantly to waste, discarding 14% of food mainly due to expiration dates and lack of planning. To combat this, we need to reconsider food waste and implement solutions that redirect good food to communities in need.
心得
- 🌍 Canada wastes enough food to feed 52 million people.
- 🍏 58% of all food in Canada is lost or wasted annually.
- 🤝 5.6 million Canadians are food insecure.
- 💨 Food waste is a significant source of methane emissions.
- 🌿 Production and processing stages account for 71% of waste.
- 🛒 Retailers waste food by overstocking attractive displays.
- 🍽️ Households discard 14% of food due to expiration dates.
- 💸 The average household wastes $1,766 of food per year.
- 🎯 Rethinking food waste can achieve better community outcomes.
- 🌱 Collective action can reduce food waste significantly.
时间轴
- 00:00:00 - 00:04:36
Canada faces a severe food waste problem, with 58% of food lost or wasted, totaling 35.5 million tonnes annually—enough to feed everyone in Canada for five months. This waste contributes to food insecurity for 5.6 million Canadians and poses significant environmental threats, as food waste emits greenhouse gases like methane. Various stages of the food supply chain contribute to this waste, with the majority occurring during production and processing due to factors like labor shortages, rejection of imperfect produce, and unfriendly best before date regulations. Retailers also exacerbate waste by overstocking products and consumers' shopping habits. Portion sizes and poor planning in restaurants and homes further increase waste, leading to an average loss of $1,766 per household per year. Addressing this complex issue requires a shift in perspective, recognizing food waste as an avoidable problem, and collaborating to redirect surplus food to those in need, creating a sustainable future.
思维导图
视频问答
How much food is wasted in Canada each year?
Canada wastes 35.5 million tonnes of food each year.
What percentage of food in Canada is lost or wasted?
58% of all food in Canada is lost or wasted.
What is the environmental impact of food waste?
Food waste is a significant environmental threat, creating methane gas which is 25 times more damaging than carbon dioxide.
Where in the supply chain does most food waste occur?
71% of food waste occurs in the production, processing, and manufacturing stages.
How much food waste comes from homes?
14% of the overall total food waste comes from households.
What is the cost of food waste per household in Canada?
Canadians waste approximately $1,766 of food per household every year.
How can we reduce food waste?
We can rethink our view of food waste, improve planning, and ensure good food reaches those in need.
What are some reasons for food waste in the production stage?
Labor shortages, low prices making harvesting uneconomical, and canceled orders lead to food waste in production.
How do best before dates contribute to food waste?
Lack of regulation on best before dates leads to perfectly good food being thrown away as consumers seek items with far-out dates.
Why do retailers waste food?
Retailers keep shelves stocked full, knowing some food will inevitably go to waste to attract shoppers.
查看更多视频摘要
- food waste
- Canada
- environmental impact
- food insecurity
- greenhouse gas emissions
- supply chain
- best before dates
- retail
- household waste
- solutions