Abstract
In this study, we designed and tested a household food waste intervention in the County of Wellington, Canada. This small study compared control households (n = 20) to those receiving an intervention package (n = 32). Food waste generation rates and composition were observed through waste composition audits before and after the intervention, and participants’ feedback on the intervention was received through a survey (n = 7). We found that although the informational campaign was generally not successful in reducing food waste generation at the community scale (possibly due to intention-behavior gaps), there is potential for such interventions to encourage a sub-set of individuals toward reduction behaviors when appropriately targeted and delivered.
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