In fact, there is more food in landfills than any other kind of waste. As this food decomposes, it emits methane, a warming gas that the EPA says is 25 times more potent than carbon dioxide. All said, food waste produces some 8 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. If food waste were a country, it would be the third-largest greenhouse-gas-emitting country in the world. If you’re thinking about all of the food your family tosses out every week, don’t worry. There are easy ways to waste fewer ingredients at every phase of the cooking process, from grocery shopping and food storage to figuring out what’s for dinner tonight and how you tidy up afterwards.
Support Organizations Working to Reduce Food Waste
According to Project Drawdown, a nonprofit focused on climate change, reimagining food waste will be part of the climate solution. “Roughly a third of the world’s food is never eaten, which means land and resources used and greenhouse gases emitted in producing it were unnecessary,” one of its reports says. “Interventions can reduce loss and waste, as food moves from farm to fork, thereby reducing overall demand.” Reducing food waste can be accomplished with tools at our disposal now—both at the grocery store and in the home kitchen—but it’s also important to note that large-scale grocery stores and related organizations are pitching in, too. For instance, some are actually rescuing food that would otherwise be landfilled. In Colorado, Boulder Food Rescue works with eight stores to save 1,200 pounds of food a day. “Our mission is to create a less wasteful food system,” says Hayden Dansky, executive director. “So we redistribute produce that is donated from grocery stores, and we take that directly to low-income housing communities and people who need food.” States across the country are home to groups with similar missions. Imperfect Foods, a grocery delivery service, sells food that would otherwise be wasted. Imperfect foods are fresh, but lack the cosmetic perfection you find in the grocery store, like apples with blemishes, cauliflower with black spots, or mangoes with slight sunburn. “Our mission is to save food from waste and to build a better system for everyone,” says Maddy Rotman, the company’s head of sustainability.
How to Limit Food Waste in Your Own Kitchen
RELATED: Reorganizing Your Fridge Is One of the Easiest Ways to Combat Food Waste—Here’s How