Cutting down on food waste across the country is a challenge, because losses happen at every stage of the supply chain.
Consumers are among the biggest culprits, says Jonathan Bloom, a food-waste activist. According to the NRDC, Americans toss one-quarter of the food they buy—an estimated 20 pounds of edible food per person every month (see graphs, below). That’s twice as much as what the average American discarded in the 1970s.
Americans waste more today because they buy more, Bloom says. Food is plentiful and relatively cheap, so consumers typically purchase too much, especially when it comes to fresh produce. People also store food improperly, sometimes refrigerating certain fruits and vegetables that last longer at room temperature. Others don’t think twice about tossing leftovers.
Americans’ other bad food habit? Trashing goods by the “best by” dates. Those dates represent when a product is at its peak taste and texture, not when it stops being safe to eat.
“If you’re treating those dates as the absolute truth on when food will go bad, then you’re going to be wasting a lot of food,” Bloom says.
Farms are another top contributor to food waste in the U.S., he adds. Agricultural producers regularly leave misshapen vegetables and discolored fruits to rot on the ground. Why? The food industry has strict standards for produce’s shape, size, and color. Harvesting fruits and vegetables that don’t meet those standards can be financially draining for farmers. Pickers also skip over produce that they suspect will no longer be at peak freshness by the time it reaches stores.
Some growers plant extra crops to make sure they fulfill their contracts with retailers. The overplanting can result in thousands of pounds of excess produce that never make it to stores or restaurants.
“We’re still operating on this mind-set of maximum production,” Bloom says, “despite year after year of not using about 40 percent of our food supply.”
Wasting food also wastes a tremendous amount of resources. About 25 percent of all U.S. water usage and 4 percent of all U.S. energy consumption go into growing and transporting food that’s never eaten, says Meghan Stasz, the director of sustainability for the Grocery Manufacturers Association.
“When we throw away food,” Stasz says, “we’re wasting all the natural resources that go into making that food. That includes the water to make it, the diesel to drive it around, and the energy to produce it, pack it, and get it to the grocery store.”
Tossing food also contributes to global warming. Food rotting in landfills around the globe releases 3.3 billion metric tons of methane and other greenhouse gases per year. That makes tossed food a significant generator of greenhouse gases.