The role of reducing food waste for resilient food systems
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Date
2020Author
Bajželj, Bojana
Quested, Thomas E.
Röös, Elin
Swannell, Richard P.J.
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Abstract
Food waste undermines long-term resilience of the global food system by aggravating ecosystem damage. The
global community must therefore work to reduce the amount of food that gets wasted. However, we should be
mindful of some potential conflicts between food waste reduction and food system resilience. Over-production
and over-supply are a contributing cause of waste, yet they also provide resilience in the form of redundancy. In
this paper, we examine individual interventions designed to minimise food waste by scoring their impact on
different aspects of resilience. We find that there are strong synergistic elements and interventions that support
short- and long-term resilience, such as improved storage, which reduces the need to provide a constant flow of
‘surplus food’ and replaces it with a stock of ‘spare’ food. Some interventions carry a risk of trade-offs due to
possible losses of redundancy, and investment lock-in that may reduce the ability of farmers to adapt by
changing what and where they farm. Trade-offs do not mean that those interventions should not be pursuit, but
they should be recognised so that can be adequately addressed with complimentary actions. This review underlines the necessity of food-systems thinking and joined-up policy.
Palabras clave
Food waste; Resilience; Food sustainability; Interventions; Food policyLink to resource
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ecoser.2020.101140Collections
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