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Canadians Are Starving in a Land of Waste

Posted: 10/09/2012 5:08 pm

Across Canada hundreds of food banks sent out special appeals over the Thanksgiving season asking people to donate generously. They had clear reason for doing so. Most food banks are facing record demand, as a deep recession that has supposedly ended still leaves its impact all over the country.

The London Food Bank, which I co-direct, has seen a 19 per cent increase over this time last year -- the majority of that increased demand made up of people who only two years ago were working. Last August saw our highest monthly demand ever in our 25-year history and our highest daily record was only two weeks ago. While many still claim that food banks should remain a temporary solution to poverty, all the indicators seem to be heading in the wrong direction.

Just as we were learning of all these new pressures on the demand for food among the marginalized, news broke of the ironic reality that Canadians waste $27 billion worth of food each year -- $27 billion. The draft report on this kind of wastage, by the Value Change Management Centre mentions that 51 per cent of that total finishes up as unwanted leftovers that end up in the garbage. The breakdown of the report, which you can read here, states that 18 per cent of the food wasted is due to packaging and processing. Retail stores waste 11 per cent, while a figure just below that (9 per cent) is lost during the farming stage. Even the food industry itself wastes 8 per cent.

If we broaden the issue out to include the United States, things don't look any better. The U.S. Natural Resources Defence Council says that almost 40 per cent of food in America goes in the garbage each year -- a figure proportionally equal to Canada.

It appears as though North Americans waste food on a grand scale. The average American wastes 10 times more food than a Southeast Asian. Like their Canadian counterparts, American families throw out 25 per cent of their groceries. And then there are those restaurants and catering services, which together discarded 126-billion pounds of food in 2008 alone. Grocery stores threw out 43 billion pounds of food in the U.S. -- mostly fresh foods.

Twenty years ago we heard that over 20 per cent of food in Canada was tossed before it ever left the package. Have we learned anything? Furthermore, there used to be a widely held belief that we shouldn't be wasting food because millions were dying of hunger in places like Africa. Now it's worse than it ever was.

What exactly are we doing? With the price of food constantly rising, and with millions more being globally added to the destitute poor each year, how can we reconcile our conduct with such developments? We can't. It's one thing to say we shouldn't need food banks, that they should be a temporary presence in our communities, but what does it matter if we are throwing out more food than is distributed by those food banks collectively each year?

It was Mahatma Gandhi who used to say, "There are people in the world so hungry, that God cannot appear to them except in the form of bread." How do we square this in a nation where we toss out $27 billion worth of food in the midst of hunger? We do have much to be thankful for as a country, yet no population can be truly grateful when throwing out food while children suffer in poverty. A huge gap exists between all those polls that say the majority questioned desire to end hunger and so much waste. It is a credibility problem -- for food companies, for citizens, and ultimately for us as a nation.

If it is true that the real cause of hunger is the powerlessness of the marginalized to gain access to the resources required to feed themselves, then the proper answer to that dilemma is not to send them to the dumps where we have just displaced our leftovers. Canada once used to feed the world with our surplus, now we can't even feed our own with it.

 

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Across Canada hundreds of food banks sent out special appeals over the Thanksgiving season asking people to donate generously. They had clear reason for doing so. Most food banks are facing record dem...
Across Canada hundreds of food banks sent out special appeals over the Thanksgiving season asking people to donate generously. They had clear reason for doing so. Most food banks are facing record dem...
 
 
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02:55 AM on 10/14/2012
We could do with this waste food in Britain, We have a scheme where a non profit scheme collects all food from super markets. This is then distributed back to the people who is less fortunate. I used to go round supermarkets and collect food for certain companies, on a voluntary basis after 12 hours down the mine>
10:38 AM on 10/12/2012
It's Value *Chain* Management Centre, not Value *Change*. You have no idea how many people make this mistake. I really wonder what a Value Change Management Centre would do. Would they try to make us adopt conservative values or something? lol.
Dinsdale Pirahna
"lookin' out the 'ole in the wall"
10:04 PM on 10/11/2012
Remember this story the next time you see a food fight in a movie or on some tv show.
11:36 PM on 10/10/2012
I think the best thing people can do is to remind restaurants and coffee shops that their daily food extras can provide a few meals or snacks for others who need them.
The Food Bank in London has always shown a tireless effort to help people in need. There are 'soup kitchens' that provide daily meals but I don't know if people need to be part of their organizations or not and they could also use some help. Some of the local churches have rotational meals and I am also sure they could use some help as well.
With unemployment the way it is in this city as well as many places in Canada, it is important for everyone to remember that others are going without.
I don't waste food at home. Leftovers become lunches the next day or put in the freezer for a meal the next week.
Why pay for something if you are going to throw it out. We need a return to teaching ourselves the way my parents taught us reminding us with every single bite of brocolli that there were millions of people in this world who were not having any dinner that night.
As Mr. Pearson so aptly put it, it is no longer a problem over there to point at, it is on our doorstep..
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Steve Lives
The Venus Project ... look it up
01:35 PM on 10/10/2012
Waste (whether it be food, or resources) is due to poor management and distribution, combined with our must make a profit monetary system. As usual, we look for answers in side the tool box we have, disregarding the fact the tools are all broken. It's time to start looking outside the box. Time to redesign how our societies function using different tools and current knowledge.
11:20 PM on 10/09/2012
Plenty of food for thought in this piece, Mr. Pearson; it should be highly recommended reading for every Canadian.

Obviously the consumer carries some of the responsibility for unconscionable waste, and in this 'land of plenty' there should not be a need for the dependence of so many on food banks. The Value Change Management Centre appears to be an agri-industry research body that recommends practices aimed at increased profitability in the industry. The full report is now on their web site (Google it...the link in the article above simply goes to another media source). I haven't read it yet, but I hope in its conclusions it at least alludes to the matter of broader relevance and implications.

I find myself wondering now, who picks up the ball here and helps communicate this information to consumers? We are very good at identifying problems, and less so at solving them. We're also far better at pointing fingers than taking personal responsibility for what we ourselves contribute. When it comes to consumption and waste systemic change is evidently called for, but so too is a change in human thought and behaviours.
11:47 AM on 10/12/2012
Value chain, not value change! Value chain managment is a business strategy (a slightly different concept from supply chain management). As you rightly point out, they are an organisation focusing on business development services, not on - er - changing people's values, which is what this alternative name that Glen Pearson has given them would imply. ;)
04:52 PM on 10/14/2012
Thanks for pointing that out Mark -- a typo on my part...yes, a slightly different concept yet perhaps an appropriate slip up; we could certainly use some change in some people's values  :-)