Abstract

Food losses and waste are currently at the heart of academic debates, civil society initiatives, and political agendas. This paper investigates food waste in school catering services focusing on six schools located in the municipality of Verona (Italy). It aims to quantify food waste, as a measure of food catering inefficiency, to identify the main causes, and to suggest a set of prevention and reduction interventions. For these purposes food waste is defined as all the products discarded from the food chain while still preserving their nutritional value and complying with safety standards. The work shows a significant level of inefficiency in the school catering services, measured by the amount of food processed and still perfectly edible, but not served during the meals. On average more than 15% of the overall processed food is wasted. Among the causes identified in this study, four of them were more relevant than others because of their implications and impact on prevention: the lack of attention to dietary habits, the rigid food procurement specifications, the menu composition, and the meal presentation.

Highlights

  • Food waste is a significant phenomenon that is currently at the heart of academic debates, civil society initiatives, and political agendas

  • This paper investigated food waste in school catering in order to assess the operational efficiency of the food services and to contribute to the understanding of food waste dynamics

  • In 2005, the municipality of Verona and Last Minute Market (LMM), a subsidiary of the University of Bologna, signed an agreement to identify a joint solution for food waste reduction in public school canteens

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Summary

Introduction

Food waste is a significant phenomenon that is currently at the heart of academic debates, civil society initiatives, and political agendas. The issue is addressed through different approaches and disciplines [1]. This, in turn, affects the general debate, the definition of the concept, and the identification of possible remedies [2,3,4,5,6,7]. In this respect this work identifies as food waste all the products discarded from the food chain while still preserving their nutritional value and complying with safety standards.

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