Abstract

The growing volumes of food globally lost or wasted and implications for food security and sustainability have raised the concern of researchers, governments, international organizations and grass-root movements. Much research and experiences investigating food waste causes and drivers focus on one specific segment of the food supply chain and limit the analysis to the situation of one or few countries, while the few studies of wider geographical scope also target other relevant and diversified objectives (e.g., food waste definition, quantification, environmental and economic impacts, and recommendations for interventions). This study, carried out by a network of European institutions involved in research and initiatives against food waste, focuses on the analysis of a broad area, Europe, through a wide and systematic literature review and consultation with stakeholders in international focus groups. The food supply chain was divided into seven segments and three main contexts were defined for the examination of food waste sources: Technological, Institutional (related to organisational factors, i.e., business management, economy, legislation, and policy), and Social (related to consumers’ behaviours and lifestyles). Results suggest a wide and multifaceted problem, interconnected across all stages of the food supply chain, from primary production, to final consumption. Within each context, the identified drivers have been grouped according to the possibilities and the type of interventions for food waste reduction. A final cross-contextual prioritization distinguished food waste sources related to (A) inherent characteristics of food; (B) social and economic factors; (C) individual non-readily changeable behaviours; (D) other priorities targeted by private and public stakeholders; (E) diversified factors, such as mismanagement, inefficient legislation, lack of awareness or information; and sub-optimal use of available technologies, which could be more promptly changed. Such diversification of causes calls for specific monitoring systems, targeted policy measures, and actions of individual stakeholders at each stage of the food supply chain.

Highlights

  • In recent years, many studies and initiatives launched by governmental and international organisations have raised public attention on food waste (FW) and its implications in terms of nutrition security, sustainable development, environmental impact, and spoiled resources

  • Such figures call for identifying FW causes along the food supply chain (FSC) and which policies should be undertaken for FW prevention and reduction

  • Based on expert interviews and literature and data analysis, the study covers all main aspects of the FW issue in the European Union (EU)

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Summary

Introduction

Many studies and initiatives launched by governmental and international organisations have raised public attention on food waste (FW) and its implications in terms of nutrition security, sustainable development, environmental impact, and spoiled resources. It has been estimated, that nearly one-third of the total food mass [1] and about one-quarter of the total food calories [2] globally produced would be lost or wasted. In December 2015, the EC identified FW among the priority areas of the EU Action Plan for Circular Economy [8], in order to develop a common methodology to measure FW and define relevant indicators, create a stakeholder platform to share best practices, clarify food legislation, facilitate food donations and recycling, and improve date labelling

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