DR RENATA CLARKE
LAST YEAR'S Food Systems Summit provoked dialogues across countries on dysfunctions of food systems in much of the world and the urgency of transforming these systems to achieve better production, a better environment, better nutrition, and a better life for people everywhere. Caribbean leaders were on the front line in calling for food-system transformation. Reducing food loss and waste is one of the lines of action that will, at the same time, increase food availability and reduce environmental degradation.
The third International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste was observed on Thursday. Awareness is the first step for conscious and constructive action. Consumers, food businesses, farmers, governments, educators, all need to be aware because they all have the power to contribute to reducing food loss and waste. The Sustainable Development Goal 12 calls on the global community to reduce food loss during production and along the supply chain and to halve food waste at retail and at the consumer level.
When food spoils before getting to the market or is wasted after reaching the market, the implications are far-reaching. The travesty of losing availability of food, at a time when food insecurity and food prices in the region are at their highest levels ever, is the most obvious impact but the loss and related environmental implications go beyond that.
Land resources, water, energy, agricultural inputs, labour that went into the production of food are also wasted when the food does not end up on someone's table. The environmental footprint associated with that production represents an environmental cost with no associated social benefit. There needs to be a holistic societal response to addressing this situation.
What can consumers do? We can be more conscientious in the planning of our meals and related food purchases to make sure we use what we buy within their shelf-life. We can exercise care in the way we store food at home to avoid spoilage and contamination. At a time when backyard gardening is becoming more widespread, we can use organic and food waste in composting.
What must governments and the private food sector do? Food loses during production and marketing are highly variable depending on country and commodity. Figures of between 20-30 per cent losses are commonly cited. During production losses can occur due to pest and disease or adverse weather conditions.
Frequently, post-production losses are related to poorly planned marketing, the absence of adequate market infrastructure (storage facilities, cold storage, processing facilities) or mismanagement of the transport, handling or processing that make the food unfit for consumption.
Loss is minimised where the private sector effectively plans, co-ordinates and manages production and marketing activities. Governments play a key facilitating role in promoting access to production and marketing information, establishing an appropriate policy/regulatory framework for investing in and running food businesses