Skip to content
Environment, National News Current Affairs

Australia wastes 29 million meals a day: $2,500 Worth of Food Annually for families as Cost-of-Living Soars

End Food Waste Australia 2 mins read

Australians are throwing away a staggering 7.6 million tonnes of food every year, worth $36.6 billion while millions of families are grappling with growing living costs.

The shocking reality, and solutions to save Australia’s food from going to waste, are being highlighted at the 2024 National Food Waste Summit in Melbourne this week (July 24-25), where experts and industry leaders - including from Coles, Simplot, Sodexo, McCain Foods, and Goodman Fielder - are rallying to tackle this national challenge.

 

“The equivalent of 29 million meals go to waste every day – enough to provide lunch daily for every Australian, while 3.7 million households are struggling to put food on the table. For families, food waste costs $2500 a year on average,” says Dr Steven Lapidge, CEO of End Food Waste Australia.

 

“Food waste happens from paddock to plate and 70% is still edible. We’re bringing industry, government and Australians together to end food waste,” he said.

 

The national Food Waste Summit features international heavyweights like Dana Gunders from ReFED, USA, and EU food waste project leader Toine Timmermans from the Netherlands, who are leading the global charge on food waste action and will share insights on tackling food waste. Industry leaders from Coles, Sodexo, McCain Foods, Simplot and Goodman Fielder will discuss the impact of the Australian Food Pact, which helped businesses save up to $4000 per tonne of food waste reduced.

 

ABC's Gardening Australia host Costa Georgiadis will MC the summit.

 

The 2024 National Food Waste Summit will also showcase innovative and forward-thinking solutions like food waste-free cities and cutting-edge packaging to extend shelf life and highlight innovative companies like Nutri V who are transforming waste streams into nutritious and delicious snacks, demonstrating how technology and creativity can transform our approach to food.

 

In his keynote address, Craig Reucassel from ABC’s War on Waste will talk about how our wasteful habits are killing the planet. The environmental impact is massive, with food waste accounting for around 3% of Australia’s greenhouse gas emissions. Halving food waste in Australia by 2030 could prevent 50 million tonnes of CO2 emissions - the equivalent of removing half the vehicles from Australian roads for a year.

 

The two-day event at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre comes at the midway point of Australia's food waste action plan - six years since the launch of the National Food Waste Strategy and six years to go until the 2030 target.

 

“Australia’s food waste doesn’t just burn a hole in our pockets – it’s an environmental disaster. The resources squandered are mind-boggling. It’s crunch time, with the cost-of-living crisis bringing the need for action into sharp focus. We’re halfway through our plan to halve food waste by 2030. This summit is crucial,” Dr Lapidge said.

 

“With the right moves, we can cut waste, save billions of dollars, and make sure every Aussie has enough to eat. There’s no time to waste, ending food waste starts with us all,” he said.

 

Please see here for the 2024 National Food Waste Summit program: https://airdrive.eventsair.com/eventsairaueprod/production-bigfishevents-public/93249bcfc65d485eb12c424ef2f1e73b

 

ENDS

 

Notes for Media

 

Dr Steven Lapidge, CEO of End Food Waste Australia, is available for comment.

On-site journalist access is available.

 

Media Contact

 

Sarah Fitzharris, Corporate Communications Manager

M: 0420 825 015  E: sarah.fitzharris@endfoodwaste.com.au

 

Rajiv Maharaj, Story Inception Media Relations

M: 0416 148 541 E: newsroom@storyinception.com

More from this category

  • Immigration, National News Current Affairs
  • 18/10/2024
  • 11:39
Sustainable Population Australia

Australia’s low fertility is all good news

SPA responds to news on Australia’s fertility Sustainable Population Australia (SPA) has welcomed news that Australia’s fertility has fallen to 1.5 children per woman,…

  • Contains:
  • Environment, Science
  • 18/10/2024
  • 09:50
UNSW Sydney

Expert Available: UNSW Scientists to comment on ‘tar balls’ on Sydney Beaches

A team of scientists from UNSW have analysed the mysterious unknown debris that washed up on Sydney beaches this week. Hundreds of the sticky blobs have washed up on shore throughout the week, including at Coogee Beach, Gordon’s Bay and Maroubra beach, withfurther beach closuresannounced. Randwick City Council said, preliminary test results “show the material is a hydrocarbon-based pollutant which is consistent with the makeup of tar balls”. “Australia’s beaches, including recently along Sydney’s coastline, have seen the arrival of tar balls – dark, spherical, sticky blobs formed from weathered oil,” says Professor Alex Donald, from theSchool of Chemistry who,…

  • Environment
  • 17/10/2024
  • 13:40
NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA)

NSW EPA MEDIA ALERT – EPA UPDATE ON SYDNEY BEACHES

PRESS CONFERENCE NSW Environment Protection Authority (EPA) Executive Director of Regulatory Practices and Services Stephen Beaman will be joined by NSW Maritime Director Darren Wood to give an update on the balls washed up on several Sydney beaches. WHEN: 2:15pm today WHERE: Coogee Beach promenade, just north of Coogee Beach Rainbow Walkway at Arden Street, Coogee NSW 2034 Contact details: media@epa.nsw.gov.au or (02) 9995 6415

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.