Up to 50% of edible and healthy food gets wasted in EU
households, supermarkets, restaurants and along the food supply chain
each year, while 79 million EU citizens live beneath the poverty line
and 16 million depend on food aid from charitable institutions.
Parliament called in a resolution adopted on Thursday for urgent
measures to halve food waste by 2025 and to improve access to food for
needy EU citizens.
Since food is wasted at all stages - by producers,
processors, retailers, caterers and consumers, MEPs call for a
co-ordinated strategy, combining EU-wide and national measures, to
improve the efficiency of food supply and consumption chains sector by
sector and to tackle food wastage as a matter of urgency. If nothing is
done, food wastage will grow 40% by 2020, says a study published by the
Commission.
The most important problem in the future will be to
tackle increased demand for food, as it will outstrip supply. We can no
longer afford to stand idly by while perfectly edible food is being
wasted. This is an ethical but also an economic and social problem, with
huge implications for the environment, said rapporteur Salvatore
Caronna (S&D, IT), prior to the vote. He also emphasized that "the
ball is now in the Commission's court. We expect nothing less than a
convincing EU strategy that will steer all 27 Member States to
systematically tackle the issue."
Better education to avoid excessive waste
To drastically reduce food wastage by 2025, new
awareness campaigns should be run at both EU and national levels to
inform the public how to avoid wasting food, says the resolution. Member
States should introduce school and college courses explaining how to
store, cook and dispose of food and also exchange best practices to this
end. To promote the idea of using food sustainably, MEPs called for
2014 to be designated as "European year against food waste".
Proper labelling and packaging
To avoid situations in which retailers offer food too
close to its expiry date and thus increasing the potential for wastage,
dual-date labelling could be introduced to show until when food may be
sold (sell-by date) and until when it may consumed (use-by date), says
the resolution.
It adds that the European Commission and Member States
should nonetheless first ensure that customers understand the difference
between labels currently used within the EU, such as the
quality-related "best before" and safety-related "use by" dates.
To enable consumers to buy just the amounts they need,
food packaging should be offered in a range of sizes and designed to
conserve food better. Foods close to their expiry dates and damaged food
products should be sold at discounted prices, to make them more
accessible to people in need, MEPs say.
Public institutions should favour responsible caterers
Public procurement rules for catering and hospitality
should be updated to ensure that where possible, contracts are awarded
to catering companies that use local produce and give away or
redistribute leftover food to poorer people or food banks free of
charge, rather than just disposing of it.
EU-level support measures such as distributing food to
least-favoured citizens or programmes encouraging consumption of fruit
and milk in schools should also be retargeted with a view to preventing
food waste, adds the resolution.
MEPs also welcomed existing initiatives in some Member
States to recover unsold food and offer it to needy citizens and called
on retailers to take part in such programmes.
Food wastage figures
Current wastage in EU27: 89 million tonnes per annum (i.e. 179 kg per capita)
Projection for 2020 (if no action is taken): 126 million tonnes (i.e. a 40% increase)
Responsibility for food waste:
- households: 42% (60% of which is avoidable)
- manufacturers: 39%
- retailers: 5%
- catering sector: 14%
(Source: European Commission)
HAWL - Sustain
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