Overeating and 'throwaway mentality' reduce global food security and damage the environment

Overeating and “throwaway mentality” reduce global food security and damage the environment
Almost half of harvested crops is lost through overeating, waste, and inefficient production processes. Credit: Markus Breig, KIT

Thirty-nine percent of adults worldwide are overweight, 13 percent even obese – with the trend increasing, says the World Health Organization (WHO). At the same time, 795 million people are starving. Still, 1.3 billion tons of food are thrown away every year according to the Welthungerhilfe. Almost 20 percent of the food made available to consumers worldwide is lost through overeating or waste alone. This is the result of an international study, in which climate researchers of Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT) were involved.

The world population consumes around ten percent more than it needs for healthy nutrition, the researchers point out in their study. Nine percent of the food are thrown away or left to spoil. Efforts to reduce these losses could improve global food security, while ensuring everyone has access to a safe, affordable, nutritious diet, and help prevent damage to the environment.

To quantify the extent of losses, geoscientists and from the United Kingdom, Germany, and Australia studied all stages of the global food system, from the growing and harvesting of crops to food consumption. For this purpose, they evaluated data collected primarily by the UN's Food and Agriculture Organization.

They found that almost half of harvested crops worldwide, or 1.2 billion tons, are lost through overconsumption, waste, and inefficient production processes before the food even arrives at the consumers.

The least efficient process is livestock production, the researchers say. Here losses amount to 78 percent or 840 million tons. More than one billion ton of harvested crops are used to produce 240 million tons of edible animal products, including meat, milk, and eggs. This stage alone accounts for 40 percent of all losses of harvested crops, researchers say.

Increased demand for some foods, particularly meat and dairy products, would decrease the efficiency of the food system and could make it difficult to feed the world's expanding population in a sustainable way, the researchers emphasize.

Meeting this demand could cause environmental harm by increasing , depleting water supplies, and causing loss of biodiversity. Encouraging people to eat fewer , reduce waste, and not exceed their nutritional needs could help reverse these trends.

"This study highlights that food security has production and consumption dimensions that need to be considered when designing sustainable food systems. It also highlights that the definition of waste can mean different things to different people," say Professor Almut Arneth and Professor Mark Rounsevell of KIT, who were involved in the study funded under the EU project LUC4C coordinated by KIT.

More information: Peter Alexander et al. Losses, inefficiencies and waste in the global food system, Agricultural Systems (2017). DOI: 10.1016/j.agsy.2017.01.014

Citation: Overeating and 'throwaway mentality' reduce global food security and damage the environment (2017, March 22) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-03-overeating-throwaway-mentality-global-food.html
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