Abstract

In 2014, Tesco – one of the world’s largest food retailers – revealed that it had generated almost 57,000 tonnes of food waste in its UK operations over the previous twelve-month period. This shocking statistic added to existing evidence of a significant environmental and social problem in the UK and across the world. This paper utilises convention theory to examine the role of major retailers in the context of this global problem and assesses their motivations for acting on food waste. Drawing on interviews with key stakeholders (including major retailers), the analysis investigates their main justifications for action on food waste. It finds that retailers mostly appealed to three conventions or ‘orders of worth’ (civic, market and opinion) and used these as a basis for their commitment to food waste reduction. We argue that the combination of these different justifications is feasible and necessary in the context of the retail sector but that they may also lead to some unintended consequences (in the retail sector and beyond). Crucially, we demonstrate how the dilution of civic justifications (by their financial and reputational counterparts) might produce negative outcomes and inaction as retailers attempt to adhere to the so-called ‘food waste hierarchy’. The paper highlights the continuing significance of convention theory as a framework for analysing possible responses to the social and environmental challenges confronting global agro-food systems.

Highlights

  • In October 2013, Tesco – one of the world’s largest food retailers – made headlines when it announced that it would audit the amount of food that is wasted across its supply chain and publish the findings

  • This paper derives from our Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) funded project: ‘Households, Retailers and Food Waste Transitions’, which investigated the emergence of food waste as a critical sustainability challenge and aimed to understand the mechanisms that are currently being used to tackle the issue

  • This paper investigated the role of the retail sector in the context of food waste

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Summary

Introduction

In October 2013, Tesco – one of the world’s largest food retailers – made headlines when it announced that it would audit the amount of food that is wasted across its supply chain and publish the findings. This paper examines the role of major retailers in the context of this global problem and assesses their motivations for acting on food waste. It uses convention theory (Boltanski and Thévenot, 1991; Ponte, 2016) to explore the three main justifications for action – civic concerns, financial implications and reputation – and how the combination of these justifications has enabled short-term action (in the retail sector), while posing a potential impediment to a long term-solution to the problem (in the retail sector and the global food system more broadly). It demonstrates how the dilution of civic justifications (by their financial and reputational counterparts) might produce negative outcomes and inaction as retailers (and other actors in the global food system) attempt to adhere to the so-called ‘food waste hierarchy’

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