War on waste: Food giants sign up to waste pledge

Food giant Nestle and major supermarkets Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose will pledge to help halve food waste by 2030, ministers have announced.
Major players from food retail and hospitality as well as chefs and social media influencers will join forces at an event today to take action to end the scandal of food waste. Picture: Lisa FergusonMajor players from food retail and hospitality as well as chefs and social media influencers will join forces at an event today to take action to end the scandal of food waste. Picture: Lisa Ferguson
Major players from food retail and hospitality as well as chefs and social media influencers will join forces at an event today to take action to end the scandal of food waste. Picture: Lisa Ferguson

Major players from food retail and hospitality as well as chefs and “social media influencers” will join forces at an event today to take action to end the “scandal” of food waste.

Around 300 individuals and businesses have been invited to the Step Up To The Plate symposium at the Victoria and Albert Museum in central London, and are expected to adopt the package of commitments.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Environment Secretary Michael Gove and minister Therese Coffey will be among the first to sign up, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said.

Nestle and supermarkets Tesco, Sainsbury’s and Waitrose are also expected adopt the measures, the department added.

Speaking at the event, Mr Gove is expected to say that throwing away millions of tonnes of food is an “environmental, economic and moral scandal”.

He will add: “Every year, millions of tonnes of good, nutritious food is thrown away. This is an environmental, economic and moral scandal, and I am determined to tackle it.

“I urge businesses to join me in signing the pledge to deliver real change to stop good food going to waste.”

The symposium is being hosted by the Government’s food surplus and waste champion Ben Elliot, who is expected to tell delegates: “Climate change is no longer a buzz-word – we must all stand up and be counted.

“We squander 10 million tonnes of food and drink every year.

“Businesses throw away food worth an estimated £5 billion and £15bn is wasted from our homes – the emissions this creates is the equivalent of every third car on the road.

“We simply must put an end to this.”

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The UK currently wastes 10.2 million tonnes of food a year, with 1.8 million coming from food manufacture, one million from the hospitality sector, 260,000 from retail and the rest from households, Defra said.

Businesses are expected to set their own targets to help contribute to the UN Sustainable Development Goal of halving per capita global food waste by 2030. The government also wants attendees to adopt the Food Waste Reduction Roadmap to help companies measure and report on efforts to cut back waste.

Devised by WRAP, a non-profit sustainability organisation, and IGD, a research and training charity, the roadmap already boasts supermarket giants such as Tesco, Aldi, Lidl, Asda, Sainsbury’s and Morrisons among the signatories to its principles. Businesses are also asked to take part in a Food Conservation week of action in November.