Tuesday, September 17, 2024
News

Waste reduction increases global food security but has limited environmental benefits: Study

   SocialTwist Tell-a-Friend    Print this Page   COMMENT

California | July 25, 2023 9:13:43 PM IST
Researchers at the University of California, Irvine, and the University of Colorado Boulder discovered that stronger control over food loss and waste does not result in better environmental consequences.

In a paper published recently inNature Food, the scientists stress that curbing food spoilage increases the amount of produce in markets, which leads to lower costs. Cheaper food encourages people to buy and eat more, offsetting the lowering of greenhouse gas emissions when more goods reach tables.

Lets say the price of cereals goes down because of improvements in food system efficiency; now you can afford to eat the same amount more often, said lead author Margaret Hegwood, a Ph.D. candidate in the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences at CU Boulder. Consumers respond to these price decreases, purchasing more than they had before, which offsets some of the benefits of reducing the food loss and waste.

Co-author Steven Davis, UCI professor of Earth system science, said, The elimination of food loss and food waste has been promoted by scientists and advocates as a way to reduce adverse environmental impacts of food production. There is a sound basis for this reasoning: Loss and waste along the supply chain accounts for as much as a quarter of global food system greenhouse gas emissions and 6 percent of total emissions worldwide.

But Davis said he and his fellow researchers found in their modeling a rebound effect whereby efficiency improvements cause price decreases and consumption increases. They suggest that this outcome could offset up to 71 percent of the benefits of cutting down on food loss and waste.

Our model basically formalized Econ 101: Reducing food loss and waste shifts the supply and demand curves, respectively. How sensitive supply and demand are to prices which we get from previous research then determines how much we project food prices and consumption will change, said co-author Matt Burgess, assistant professor at the CU Boulder institute.

There is a tension between the two objectives of eliminating food wasteand increasing food security, Davis said.Improving supply chain efficiency and thereby lowering food costs could help make food more affordableinless-advantaged countries. But, especially in those places, we may need to adjust our expectations about theenvironmental benefits of avoiding waste and loss. (ANI)

 
  LATEST COMMENTS (0)
POST YOUR COMMENT
Comments Not Available
 
POST YOUR COMMENT
 
 
TRENDING TOPICS
 
 
CITY NEWS
MORE CITIES
 
 
 
MORE SCIENCE NEWS
Researchers discover changes in the brai...
Contrail avoidance is less likely to dam...
Long-term metastatic melanoma survival s...
Study finds how cancer develops when imm...
More...
 
INDIA WORLD ASIA
'Lot of external force trying to impact ...
Punjab: BSF seizes heroin in Tarn Taran ...
PM Modi visits exhibition at 4th Global ...
UP CM Yogi Adityanath greets Uttarakhand...
'This is a drama...': MP CM Mohan Yadav ...
Karnataka: Rapid Action Force deployed a...
More...    
 
 Top Stories
"Great": German minister Svenja Sch... 
Sonakshi Sinha to Dulquer Salmaan, ... 
Kolkata rape-murder case: BJP to ho... 
Union Minister Piyush Goyal launche... 
"He asked what changes could be bro... 
Andhra Pradesh: CM Naidu pledges 72... 
PoJK activists criticises Pakistan'... 
Curfew relaxed in four Manipur dist...