Tesco CEO Dave Lewis, head of a global campaign to cut food waste, congratulates Sainsbury for publishing its food waste figures and challenges other retailers to come clean

Imagine a land mass greater than China. Now imagine that land is only used to produce food. Then suppose all the crops and produce from those 2.5bn acres are not eaten. Imagine all that – and you have grasped the amount of food the world wastes every year.

Every year a third of the world’s food is wasted. It adds up to around 1.3bn tonnes. In the UK alone, we waste over 10m tonnes of food in a year.

By any standard, these are huge numbers. This level of waste is clearly not acceptable. The case for action becomes even stronger when we consider that one in nine people are malnourished worldwide.

There are other reasons too why food waste needs to be addressed. Take climate change. Food waste today is responsible for around 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions – if it were a country, food waste would be the world’s third-largest emitter, after China and the USA. So there are strong – even overwhelming – moral, social and environmental reasons to reduce food waste. But with this imperative is also an opportunity.

Champions 12.3

This week a new report has been released on behalf of Champions 12.3, a group of public and private sector leaders who have made a commitment to help halve global food waste per capita by 2030, in line with Target 12.3 of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals. It sets out the economic arguments for reducing food waste.

The findings could not be clearer. Based on analysis covering 1,200 business sites across 700 companies in 17 countries – representing the manufacturing, retail, hospitality and food service industries – the report shows that almost every time a business made an investment in curbing food waste, there was a positive return on that investment. For every £1 invested in reducing food waste, half the business sites had at least a £14 return.

In other words, reducing waste offers real business opportunities. So we need to put food waste on the boardroom agenda. CEOs rely on hard numbers. Until now, there hasn’t been a clear set of data and financial analysis that business leaders can point to on food waste. Our ambition with this report is to change that and make sure food waste gets the focus from business that it deserves.

But this is also about courage. We need businesses to show leadership and face the scale of the issue. That is why as Champions 12.3 we are calling on businesses to do three things.

Credit: Tesco

 

Targets and Transparency

First, set stretching targets. The Sustainable Development Goal is clear – halve per capita food waste by 2030 at the retail and consumer levels, and reduce food losses along production and supply chains. At Tesco, we have also set ourselves the goal that by the end of 2017 no food that is safe for human consumption will be wasted from our UK retail operations.

The second step is transparency. In 2013, Tesco took the step of publishing its UK food waste data. The numbers reveal that less than 1% of our food is wasted.

This probably makes us one of the most efficient retailers in the world. But in a business that serves around 50 million customers a week that still adds up to around 60,000 tonnes every year, around 30,000 tonnes of which is safe to eat.

Over the last few months, more retailers have signed up for transparency. I would like to pay credit to Mike Coupe and Sainsbury’s for publishing their waste figures for the first time last year. The next step is for all UK retailers and more food businesses to share their data: from members of the IGD through to the Food and Drink Federation.

To do this, we need a clear, consistent measurement methodology. Last year the Champions 12.3 helped to establish this through the Food Loss and Waste Protocol. Four years ago, Tesco set out its own methodology but we did this in isolation. So we have engaged the food industry and industry bodies to work together on a common framework that is in line with the protocol.

If we can find common ground, and build on the support expressed by the Consumer Goods Forum, we will change the approach we have at Tesco to adopt the new methodology. The point is that what we need is a clear, category-specific measure of food waste, rather than the aggregated data currently provided by the retail industry.

Credit: Tesco

 

Innovation

The third step is innovation. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach, so what needs to be done will vary. In developing countries tackling food losses during production, handling and storage is critically important. In developed countries and urban areas, steps to prevent food waste in retail operations, restaurants and the home can have the greatest impact.

At Tesco, a key innovation has been developing a new partnership with the food charity FareShare and the social enterprise FoodCloud. It is designed to make sure that any surplus food that’s safe to eat from our stores is shared with food charities each evening. We’ve already rolled the partnership out to over 1,100 stores and it will be in all stores by the end of the year. This last year we have estimated we have donated over 5,000 tonnes of edible food.

No matter what business we work in, the key thing is to see the scale of the challenge and take action. This report shows there’s no longer any social, environmental or economic reason not to act. Even if the moral imperative doesn’t move us, the clear business case for reducing food waste should persuade every CEO.

 

This article first appeared in the Daily Telegraph. See also NGO Voices: ‘We need more companies to join food waste battle’

 



Related Reads

comments powered by Disqus