Abstract

Food waste is a crisis of our time, yet it remains a data gap in Aotearoa New Zealand’s (NZ’s) environmental reporting. This research contributes to threshold values on NZ’s food waste and seeks to understand the impact of the 2020 COVID-19 lockdown on household food waste in NZ. The data presented here form part of the ‘Covid Kai Survey’, an online questionnaire that assessed cooking and food planning behaviours during the 2020 lockdown and retrospectively before lockdown. Of the 3028 respondents, 62.5% threw out food ‘never’/‘rarely’ before lockdown, and this number increased to 79.0% during lockdown. Participants who wasted food less frequently during lockdown were more likely to be older, work less than full-time, and have no children. During lockdown, 30% and 29% of those who ‘frequently’ or ‘sometimes’ struggled to have money for food threw out food ‘sometimes or more’; compared with 20% of those who rarely struggled to have money for food (p < 0.001). We found that lower levels of food waste correlated with higher levels of cooking confidence (p < 0.001), perceived time (p < 0.001), and meal planning behaviours (p < 0.001). Understanding why food waste was generally considerably lower during lockdown may inform future initiatives to reduce food waste, considering socio-economic and demographic disparities.

Highlights

  • We aimed to investigate the influence of the national response to COVID-19 lockdown conditions on household food waste and correlated behaviours

  • We found that both pre- and during-Covid lockdown, high cooking confidence translated to reduced food waste

  • While the more than 3000 responses to the Aotearoa New Zealand Covid Kai survey suggest that the COVID-19 lockdown restrictions brought with it a reduction in household food waste, the story is more complicated than this

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Summary

Introduction

The Problem of Food Waste and Food Sustainability. Food waste has received significant attention in recent academic discourse due to the staggering figures of an estimated 1.3 billion tonnes of food being wasted globally each year [1]. The UN Environment Programme’s (UNEP) Food Waste Index suggests that around 17% of global food production may go to waste, with 61% of this waste from domestic sources [2]. The environmental degradation that occurs due to food waste–the excess methane and landfill leachate production, or additional dump space required when organic material is landfilled, not to mention the fossil fuels and greenhouse 4.0/).

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