Live simply that others may simply live
from w
Woke up in the middle of the night with a sore knee etc. so while the kettle boils to fix the hot water bottle, I checked out the internet. Found this piece in the ABC news tonight. Too true. The excesses and waste at this time of the year has nothing to do with Christmas really. How can we change from being so wasteful?
Revellers warned to
limit Christmas food waste
Planning ahead
Woke up in the middle of the night with a sore knee etc. so while the kettle boils to fix the hot water bottle, I checked out the internet. Found this piece in the ABC news tonight. Too true. The excesses and waste at this time of the year has nothing to do with Christmas really. How can we change from being so wasteful?
Revellers warned to
limit Christmas food waste
By Lindy Kerin
Posted
Australians are expected to spend about $10
billion on food over the Christmas period, but a staggering 35 per cent will be
wasted and end up as landfill.
Food rescue group Oz Harvest,
which collects leftover food and distributes it to charities, says it will pick
up about 150 tonnes of food throughout December.
Oz Harvest founder Ronnie Khan
says the group is distributing to more than 400 charities and welfare agencies.
She says waste increases
significantly at this time of year.
"From mid-October to the
end of December, we call this our harvest period," she said.
"It's the time to collect
as much as we can, because there's an abundance of food being shared around
with those people who have.
"I just got a call that
there's 75 kilos of dark chocolate, magnificent dark chocolate which will be
beautiful as part of hampers.
"We're collecting the
equivalent of around 140 to 150 tonnes a month - that's just in Sydney. That's
about 20 tonnes more than usual."
Oz Harvest driver Marcel says
the increase in food waste is not just coming from homes but from businesses
holding Christmas parties and other festive events.
"There's more waste at
this time of year probably than at any other and that's because as we approach
Christmas, everyone likes to party, everyone likes to have more food, more
drink, and that's both the corporate sector and many small businesses," he
said.
"That means that for Oz
Harvest, it's a very busy time for pickups, but it's also a very busy time for
deliveries because all the charities want to make sure the people they serve
and the people they support are able to participate in the festive season and
not miss out because of financial or other hardship.
"So it's a special time
for us and we do the very best we can to pick up as much food as we can and get
it as quickly as possible to the charities and into the hands and the mouths of
those that need it."
Planning ahead
The
shocking level of waste is of great concern to environment group Planet Ark.
It says every year Australians
generate about 361 kilograms of food waste per person.
Planet Ark recycling programs
manager Janet Sparrow says 35 per cent of food is expected to be wasted this
month.
"There's a lot of food
waste being thrown out, and we've got a lot of room for improvement over this
period," she said.
Ms Sparrow says there are a
number of things people can do to reduce their food waste this Christmas.
"Planning ahead is a
really key part of reducing food waste, and also thinking about your leftovers
- what you're going to do with your leftovers after the big feast, how you're
going to store them and whether you're going to share them with you friends and
family that you're celebrating with," she said.
"They're really key things
that you can do this Christmas to reduce your food waste."
Planet
Ark has launched an education campaign to encourage Australians to think
about how they can reduce their environmental impact over the festive season.
1 Comments:
This is so wonderful, Wendy, and uplifting to know about. Thanks for spreading the word. I wish there was more of this being done throughout the world.
annie
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