The UN food agency has launched an urgent appeal for action to reduce the amount of food that is wasted, saying lack of food, hunger and malnutrition affect every country in the world, NAN reports.
According to the report, The Food and
Agriculture Organisation (FAO) said on Tuesday that 17 per cent of all food
available to consumers in 2019 ended up being thrown away.
An additional 132 million people face food
and nutrition insecurity today because of the COVID-19 pandemic, FAO said,
ahead of the International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste, on
Wednesday, 29 September.
The problem of food waste is a global one
and not limited to wealthy nations alone, said Nancy Aburto, Deputy Director of
FAO’s Food and Nutrition Division Economic and Social Development Stream,
speaking at a press conference in Geneva, Switzerland.
“Food insecurity, hunger and malnutrition are impacting every country in the world and no country is unaffected; 811 million people suffer hunger, two billion suffer micronutrient deficiencies – that’s vitamin and mineral deficiencies – and millions of children suffer stunting and wasting, deadly forms of under-nutrition.”
The FAO official warned that the high cost
of “healthy” diets, meant that they were now “out of reach” of every region in
the world, including Europe.
The report stated further as shown below:
She
also said that more countries needed to embrace innovation to reduce waste,
such as new packaging that can prolong the shelf-life of many foods, while
smartphone apps can bring consumers closer to producers, reducing the time
between harvest and plate.
Reducing
food loss and waste would improve agri-food systems and help towards achieving
food security, food safety and food quality, all while delivering on
nutritional outcomes.
According
to FAO, it would also contribute “significantly to the reduction of greenhouse
gas emissions, as well as pressure on land and water resources”.
With
less than nine years left to reach Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 12 on
ensuring sustainable consumption, and target 12.3 to halve per capita global
food waste at the retail and consumer levels, there is an urgent need to
accelerate action, up to the 2030 deadline.
And
with just three months to go, during this International Year of Fruits and
Vegetables, FAO has reminded that produce provides human nutrition and food
security while working to achieve the SDGs.
“In
the current health crisis we are facing around the world, promoting healthy
diets to strengthen our immune systems is especially appropriate”, FAO chief QU
Dongyu, said.
He
also noted that food loss and waste in the fruits and vegetables sector
remained a problem with considerable consequences.
No comments:
Post a Comment