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Turkey in the Trash: Fighting the Growing Food Waste Epidemic

Turkey in the Trash: Fighting the Growing Food Waste Epidemic

Turkey in the Trash: Fighting the Growing Food Waste Epidemic

We are now in the biggest week of the year for eating in the United States. One estimate shows Americans will spend nearly three billion dollars on Thanksgiving dinner food in 2017.

But how much of that will end up in the garbage?

Finding Real-Life Solutions to Growing Food Waste Epidemic: Estimated 30-40% of Food Goes into the Garbage
Finding Real-Life Solutions to Growing Food Waste Epidemic: Estimated 30-40% of Food Goes into the Garbage

The United Stated Department of Agriculture estimates between 30 and 40 percent of the country’s food supply is wasted. There are several efforts in place to curb food waste, including composting and campaigns to show the impact of throwing food away.

But are they working?

Danyi Qi and Brian Roe of The Ohio State University conducted an experiment in which people got free lunch in a cafeteria setting and were given different information about if, or how, leftover food would be handled.

Roe, who leads the Ohio State Food Waste Collaborative, says this is a critical issue that “people can rally around, but there isn’t one set way to combat the problem.

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“(The country) is moving forward with a lot of good ways to reduce food waste,” Roe said, “but what ways are working in harmony and which are working in conflict?”

What happens when people know if food is being composted? How does guilt play a role in food waste? Those questions and more are analyzed in a paper by Qi and Roe titled “Foodservice Composting Crowds out Consumer Food Waste Reduction Behavior in a Dining Experiment.” That paper was recently selected to appear in the American Journal of Agricultural Economics, and it’s more than worth a read!

In the meantime – here are 5 things you can do to combat waste in your own home this holiday season;

    1. Do not use disposables. You and your family members and friends can trade dish washing.
    2. Bring tupperware and send home everyone with doggy bags that are freezable.
    3. Have a guest drop leftovers at a local homeless shelter.
    4. Compost food leftovers, or drop your leftovers to your local farmers market or coop who always have composts.
    5. Don’t overbuy – buy exactly what you know your guests will eat. We personally hope that’s not tortured, dead birds! If you need tips on a vegan thanksgiving – use our search engine!
Turkey in the Trash: Fighting the Growing Food Waste Epidemic
Turkey in the Trash: Fighting the Growing Food Waste Epidemic