Abstract

Food rescue, the practice of gathering food that could otherwise be wasted and redirecting it for human consumption, represents a critical opportunity to improve food security and reduce waste. As global interest in reducing hunger and food waste grows, better insight is needed to assess and compare the effectiveness of different models of food rescue. We conducted a systematic review of peer-reviewed studies evaluating food rescue interventions with the aim of synthesizing findings and comparing methodologies. We searched PubMed, Academic Search Ultimate, and Science Citation Index for studies published worldwide, in English, through June 2019. Studies were included that: a) evaluated an existing or proposed food rescue intervention and, b) quantitatively or qualitatively measured the intervention impact. All nineteen included studies were observational and the intervention types ranged widely. The most commonly reported metric was the weight of food recovered. Few studies reported client outcome measures. The included studies suggested promising effects of food rescue interventions, including positive return on investment, decreased environmental burden, large quantities of food rescued and clients served, and high stakeholder satisfaction. Comparison across studies was challenging, however, due to inconsistent metrics and insufficiently detailed methodology. This review documents a need for additional evaluation of food rescue interventions and recommends a standardized methodology. Additional dialogue among key stakeholders is warranted to develop consistent, meaningful metrics to assess food rescue.

Highlights

  • Food rescue, sometimes referred to as food recovery or redistribution, is the practice of gathering rescuable food and redirecting it for human consumption

  • Food rescue represents a critical opportunity in a food system with high levels of both waste and food insecurity

  • This systematic review provides the first synthesis of peer-reviewed studies examining food rescue interventions

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Summary

Introduction

Sometimes referred to as food recovery or redistribution, is the practice of gathering rescuable food and redirecting it for human consumption. While there is no universal criterion for rescuability, the term refers to edible food which is currently safe to eat and of good quality; rescuable food may contain inedible parts [1]. Hierarchy, which prioritizes actions to prevent and divert wasted food, feeding hungry people through food rescue ranks just below source reduction [2]. Food rescue represents a critical opportunity in a food system with high levels of both waste and food insecurity. An estimated one third of the global food supply is lost or wasted, amounting to approximately 1.3 billion tons per year [3], while at the same time, 2 billion people, 26% of the world’s population, experience moderate or severe food insecurity [4]. A 2016 analysis published by ReFED, a multi-stakeholder

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