Abstract

The Commission for Environmental Cooperation (CEC) has estimated that Canadian households waste 85 kg of food per person annually. Food waste has become an increasingly common focus for policy, regulation, interventions, and awareness-raising efforts in Canada. However, there is still a relative dearth of data to inform such decision-making processes or to provide narratives to contextualize behavior change efforts. In this paper, we describe the results of an uncommonly detailed observational study of household food waste. A total of 94 families with young children living in Guelph, Ontario chose to participate in this study. Over the course of multiple weeks, we collected data on their food purchases, food consumption, and waste generation. All three streams of waste (garbage, recycling, and organic waste) were audited and the food type, degree of avoidability, and weight of each individual component of the organic waste stream was recorded. Using this highly granular data set, we found that the average household in our study generated approximately 2.98 kg of avoidable food waste per week. This estimate was then contextualized in terms of economic losses (dollar value), nutritional losses (calories, vitamins, and minerals) and environmental impacts (global warming potential, land, and water usage). In short, weekly avoidable food waste per household was calculated to be equivalent to $18.01, 3,366 calories, and 23.3 kg of CO2. These multiple valuation frameworks, which are based in detailed observations of family food behaviors rather than estimations derived from system-wide data, will enable more informed and urgent conversations about policy, programming, and interventions in order to reduce the volume of wasted food at the consumer level.

Highlights

  • At the international scale, there has been a relatively recent increase in attention to food waste in both research and policy [1,2,3,4], suggesting that conversations about this topic have gained prominence and momentum in our collective consciousness

  • The average avoidable food waste across the sample was 2.98 kg per week, which is consistent with our previous work in Guelph

  • The per capita total food waste generation rate in our sample of 1.1 kg per week, or 57.2 kg per year, is lower than the 85 kg per year estimate of per capita total residential food waste generated by the Commission for Environmental Cooperation [12]

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Summary

Introduction

There has been a relatively recent increase in attention to food waste in both research and policy [1,2,3,4], suggesting that conversations about this topic have gained prominence and momentum in our collective consciousness. In Canada, food waste has recently become the subject of municipal, Frontiers in Nutrition | www.frontiersin.org von Massow et al. Multiple Impacts of Food Waste provincial, and national policy discussions. The creation of multistakeholder organizations to inform food waste policy-making and intervention design [e.g., see [9,10,11]] is another indicator of rising attention to food waste as an issue of concern in the Canadian context

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