Abstract

In European countries over 40% of food loss and waste occurs at the retail and consumer stages; this situation cannot be sustained and remediation is urgently needed; opportunities for change must be created. “Nudge” techniques have been shown to be effective in changing behaviour in areas related to food consumption (e.g., healthy diet), but the effectiveness of interventions using nudge techniques to change food waste behaviours remains unclear, despite a growing body of research. The aim of this review is to elucidate means to change household food waste behaviour using nudge approaches and identify priority needs for further research. Four databases, grey literature and reference lists were searched systematically to identify relevant research on nudges to change food waste behaviours. This search identified sixteen peer-reviewed research articles and two grey literature reports that were critically appraised using a critical appraisal checklist framework for descriptive/case series. Four studies deemed reliable show interventions using nudges of social norms, reminders or social norms with disclosure were effective in changing food waste behaviours at the household level, while disclosure alone, i.e., revealing environmental costs of food waste, was not. This review, unique in the application of a critical appraisal, suggests there is reliable information on the effectiveness of nudge for food waste recycling interventions when incorporating nudges of social norms, reminders or disclosure alongside use of social norms. If food waste recycling behaviour is considered an upstream measure to raise consumers’ consciousness on the amount of food waste they produce, this may have a positive impact on food waste reduction and therefore has important policy implications for food waste behaviour change at the household level.

Highlights

  • Sustainability aims to protect the natural environment human and environmental health, while compelling innovation so as not to compromise lifestyle for future generations [1]

  • This review indicates there is some information on the benefit of nudges for food waste recycling interventions, which as an upstream measure may have a positive impact on food waste reduction

  • In conclusion there is no assessment of study quality in previous reviews of food waste behaviour interventions, this review indicates a lack of quality primary studies using interventions with nudge for food waste behaviour change

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Summary

Introduction

Sustainability aims to protect the natural environment human and environmental health, while compelling innovation so as not to compromise lifestyle for future generations [1]. Approaches to sustainability intend to maintain the delicate ecosystems of earth in balance, usually through encouraging renewable fuel sources, protecting physical environments and decreasing carbon emissions. Poor sustainability is a key concern affecting the global food system [2]. This situation is a significant problem globally for societies and governments. Food processing and production create environmental problems along the entire food supply chain [3,4] with direct effects on environmental resources through use of fertile soils, fresh water, energy, fertilisers and release of carbon emissions in the production and transport of food [5,6,7,8,9].

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