Abstract

Food waste is the origin of major social and environmental issues. In industrial societies, domestic households are the biggest contributors to this problem. But why do people waste food although they buy and value it? Answering this question is mandatory to design effective interventions against food waste. So far, however, many interventions have not been based on theoretical knowledge. Integrating food waste literature and ambivalence research, we propose that domestic food waste can be understood via the concept of ambivalence—the simultaneous presence of positive and negative associations towards the same attitude object. In support of this notion, we demonstrated in three pre-registered experiments that people experienced ambivalence towards non-perishable food products with expired best before dates. The experience of ambivalence was in turn associated with an increased willingness to waste food. However, two informational interventions aiming to prevent people from experiencing ambivalence did not work as intended (Experiment 3). We hope that the outlined conceptualization inspires theory-driven research on why and when people dispose of food and on how to design effective interventions.

Highlights

  • People’s Willingness to Waste Food. resources are scarce and many people in the world are starving, about30 percent of food is produced in vain, accounting for 1.3 billion tons of food waste per year [1]

  • We examined whether best before dates—giving a reason to believe that food is spoiled—increase ambivalence towards expired food compared to production dates via two 2 × 3 (Suggested Shelf Life [long, short, expired]) repeated measures ANOVAs

  • The analysis revealed a main effect for the factor suggested shelf life, F(2, 444) = 8.75, p < 0.001, ηp 2 = 0.04, 95% confidence interval (CI)

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Summary

Introduction

30 percent of food is produced in vain, accounting for 1.3 billion tons of food waste per year [1]. To fight such food waste, plenty of initiatives have been instigated. Two case studies in the UK demonstrated that such local-intensive campaigning over 3 to 6 months may reduce food waste by 15% (pre to post-campaign). This accounts for approximately 0.4–0.5 kg of wasted food per week and household [2]

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