식량 시스템 변화

식품 손실 및 폐기물 감소

15년 전, 글로벌 푸드뱅킹 네트워크(Global FoodBanking Network)는 전 세계 사람들이 음식에 접근할 수 있도록 하기 위해 만들어졌습니다. 임무는 간단했습니다. 지역사회가 가장 필요할 때 지원하기 위해 지역 푸드뱅크의 글로벌 네트워크를 시작하고 강화하며 유지하는 것입니다. 이 사명은 오늘날에도 여전히 우리를 인도하고 있습니다.

Innovate to Alleviate는 기아 완화 노력을 더욱 효율적이고 효과적이며 포괄적으로 만드는 GFN 및 회원 푸드 뱅크의 판도를 바꾸는 접근 방식과 적응 등 15가지 독특한 혁신을 강조하여 15주년을 기념합니다. 세계 식량 손실 및 폐기물 인식의 날에 시작하여 세계 식량의 날에 마무리되는 이 캠페인은 푸드 뱅크가 그들이 봉사하는 지역 사회에 뿌리를 두고 있으며 회복력 있는 식량 시스템에 필수적인 기아 문제를 해결하는 데 얼마나 중요한 요소인지 보여줍니다.


The belief that hunger alleviation is a food bank’s primary job is not wrong, but it’s incomplete.

Food banks are also at the forefront of fostering healthier communities and a healthier planet through the reduction of food loss and waste. By recovering edible food, redistributing it to communities in need, and preventing it from sitting in landfills and emitting greenhouse gases, food banks play an important and innovative role in ensuring that edible food ends up where it’s intended: in the hands of our neighbors.

What is food loss and waste? Why is it a problem?

The combination of food losswhen food is lost after harvest but before retail—and food wastewhen food is thrown out at the grocery and consumer level—is a serious problem, especially when 768 million people around the world currently experience hunger.

Of all the food produced in the world, nearly one-third is lost or wasted. About 14 percent of all food produced is lost between harvest and retail due to surplus, cosmetic blemishes, and inadequate storage or transportation, and another 17 percent of total food production is wasted in grocery stores, restaurants, and homes.

This paradox of millions of tons of food decomposing while millions of people go hungry causes significant damage to our communities, our economies, and our planet.

Food loss and waste erodes food security, decreases food availability, and contributes to higher food prices. It also causes economic losses at every step of the supply chain as the resources used to produce food—water, land, energy, and capital—are squandered when that food is lost or wasted. Lastly, food loss and waste pose a threat to our planet. As lost and wasted food decomposes in landfills, it contributes 8 to 10 percent of the world’s greenhouse gases—ultimately intensifying climate change and causing further fractures in our food system.

How food banks help reduce food loss and waste

The problem of food loss and waste is enormous, but food banks have proven to be a sustainable, green solution to this problem by partnering with farmers, distributors, grocers, and food services to redirect wholesome, surplus food to people experiencing hunger. The impact of this food recovery work, when quantified, is staggering. In 2019, for example, members of the world’s three largest food bank organizations recovered 3.75 million metric tons of food, enough to fill nearly 1,292 Olympic swimming pools. And because that food was recovered, over 12 billion kilograms of greenhouse gases were prevented from entering the atmosphere via food decomposition.

This example demonstrates food banks’ ability to simultaneously reduce food loss and waste, support local supply chains, and feed food insecure communities, creating an innovative culture that keeps food out of landfills and within local communities. Reducing food loss and waste is not new, but strategies for doing so efficiently and economically have been enabled by food banks’ leadership all over the world.

Through collaborations at every stage of the food supply chain—from farmers, distributors and wholesalers, processors and manufacturers, and grocery retailers and food service—food banks ensure that healthy food is procured quickly, safely, and at little-to-no cost, a ripple effect that benefits everyone involved.

Furthermore, by prioritizing this innovation in tandem with hunger alleviation, food banks help advance progress on important global goals, such as the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal Target 12.3, which aims to halve per capita global food waste and reduce food losses by 2030.

Food banks are a vital part of our food system, not only because they serve millions of people facing hunger, but because they are uniquely situated to tackle the problem of food loss and waste through innovative strategies that benefit everyone. Through expertise, resources, and connections, The Global FoodBanking Network supports community leaders who are using this green, innovative model to address food security, mitigate the effects of climate change, and improve economies.

더 알아보기 전 세계 지역사회의 기아 완화 노력을 지원하는 기타 독특한 혁신에 대해 알아보세요.

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