Increase Donation Infrastructure and Diversion to Food Banks
Product Type: All
Stage: Distribution & Marketing, Consumption
Problem: Unsold food is mostly wasted on disposal by retailers
Solution: Enforce diversion of unsold food to charities and food banks and increase infrastructure
- Retailers often directly dispose of unsold food products instead of diverting unsold merchandise to food banks and other foundations which distribute food to at-risk populations.
- Expanding food bank and other donation infrastructure and establishing partnerships with retailers to divert unsold, non-spoiled food to food banks and other non-profit distributors has the potential to reduce an estimated 103 thousand tons of food waste in the United States alone.
- Food banks themselves can expand infrastructure to increase capacity to accept diverted food: the Food Bank of Northeast Georgia in the United States secured $4.8 million in 2015 to build a modern donation facility with 6,000 square feet of freezer and cooler space. The Second Harvest Food Bank of Middle Tennessee in the United States worked with a green bean producer to install a processing line that would sort out misshapen or otherwise retail-unsuitable produce for donation to the food bank. The effort is expected to recover 1 million pounds of green beans per year at scale.
- Legislative regulation can also push retailers to divert unsold merchandise to charities and food banks instead of destroying it on disposal. The French senate passed a February 2016 law prohibiting the destructive disposal of non-spoiled food approaching its “best-before” sale date. Supermarkets over 400 square meters are required to sign contracts to donate unsold food to charities. The law followed a grassroots effort among shoppers and anti-poverty campaigners and food waste reduction activists. The grassroots campaign led to a petition which resulted in the law.
Resource :
ReFED (http://www.refed.com/solutions/donation-storage-and-handling) ;
The Guardian (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/04/french-law-forbids-food-waste-by-supermarkets), United States