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The Pros And Cons Of Wasted Food

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Americans throw away billions of pounds of food, worth billions of dollars and enough to feed millions of people each year. Wasted food is the single largest component of American landfills. Every year, around 40 percent of all food goes unconsumed in the United States. This amounts to Americans squandering as much as $218 billion annually growing, processing and transporting food that never gets eaten. That is a fairly large waste of resources considering all that freshwater and land, all that fertilizer and energy used was for nothing. ‘Washington Post’. Even Europe does a better job of curtailing food waste and food waste in Europe alone could feed 200 million hungry people! Food waste is often described as a “farm-to-fork” problem because produce is lost in fields, warehouses, packaging, distribution, supermarkets, restaurants and fridges. Why? We purchase too many food products, our eyes are bigger than our stomachs, and we buy what is not expected. One of the many reasons Americans have a big amount of food waste every year comes right from the source: farming. Farming is a major contributor to food waste in the United States for different reasons. According to the Washington Post, “Roughly 7 percent of the produce that's grown in the United States simply gets stranded on fields each year.” When it comes to farming, there are many ways produce may get wasted. To begin, some growers plant more crops than there is demand for to hedge against disease and weather, which can create a surplus of crops. By the same token, produce often goes unpicked because it does not meet standards for its looks—shape, color or weight. At times, perfectly fine crops go unharvested after food-safety warnings are announced by the FDA (Food and Drug Administration). Immigration laws can also have an impact on food waste by creating a shortage of farmworkers, leaving produce to go unpicked. After crops have been harvested and gathered from the fields, farmers tend to cull produce to make sure it meets minimum standards for its looks. In the end, around 30 percent of produce that is actually harvested and picked from farms never actually reaches supermarkets due to trimming, quality selection, and failure to meet cosmetic

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