Food waste in Japan: Trends, current practices and key challenges
Autor: | Desmond Allen, Yoshiaki Totoki, Yasuhiko Hotta, Magnus Bengtsson, Chen Liu, Atsushi Santo, Atsushi Watabe, Matthew Hengesbaugh |
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Rok vydání: | 2016 |
Předmět: |
Engineering
Food industry Waste management Renewable Energy Sustainability and the Environment business.industry 020209 energy Strategy and Management 02 engineering and technology Building and Construction 010501 environmental sciences Food safety 01 natural sciences Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering Agricultural economics Food waste Agriculture Food supply 0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineering Food systems Cleaner production business 0105 earth and related environmental sciences General Environmental Science Waste disposal |
Zdroj: | Journal of Cleaner Production. 133:557-564 |
ISSN: | 0959-6526 |
Popis: | Food waste remains a critical issue in Japan, especially in light of the country's low food self-sufficiency rate and shortage of available landfill sites for waste disposal. In order to evaluate options for further preventing and mitigating food waste in Japan, we analyzed food waste trends by estimating the disparity between calorie/protein supply and intake, and clarified the current status of waste in the Japanese food supply chain, with a view towards providing policy recommendations based on recent official published data and reports on food waste. We show that food waste measured between 1960 and 2012 in Japan can be divided into three distinct periods: low levels of food waste were observed from 1960 through the mid-1970s, increasing food waste during mid-1970s through the late-1990s, and decreasing levels of food waste since 2001. Average calorie and protein loss between food supply and intake were 22% and 15% respectively in 2012. Of total food waste in the food supply chain in 2011, 43% was recycled or reduced. Presently another 21.52 million tons could potentially be recycled or reduced by further efforts, with our data indicating that 9.52 million tons could be achieved by households, 4.24 by food business industries, 3.95 through storage and transportation, and 3.81 by agricultural producers. Accordingly, although Japan's Food Waste Recycling Law and related initiatives have made progress in encouraging recycling and waste minimization among food business industries since 2001, further efforts to systematically reduce and recycle food wastes are urgently needed across all other stages in the food supply chain, especially at the consumer level. We propose applying an evidence-based approach to food education, strengthening integrated municipal solid waste management, improving source separation of food waste by residents and related stakeholders, promoting cross-sectoral alliances and encouraging targeted commitments as strategies to prevent and mitigate food wastes. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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