According to Jenny Donovan in Architecture, Planning and Food, 25%-50% of Australian food produce are thrown away because they can't reach the size/weight regulation. Half of our potatoes are dumped in the bin because they don't look quite as good! They don't taste any different, they are not poisonous or anything. They just are not as good looking. Well, bugger off then, into the dump you go.
In fact, this manner of unsustainable thinking happens in almost every step of the entire food supply system. Food production, processing and transport, marketing and retailing, and waste disposal.
Firstly, we are using large amount of argochemicals in our farms. Although it is necessary in order to maintain a health production to feed the population, we are eventually trading fossil fuels for food production because argochemicals are products of oil industry.
Second, like I mentioned, the wastage of fresh produce in processing is enormous. Various of regulations and food related laws on one hand protect consumer's health and food qualities, on the other hand cause large amount of 'under-qualified' produce go to waste.
Marketing of food is not always well organized in an urban environment. There are certain areas in the city turns into 'food desert' because the lack of access to food shops and markets. Also, lots of local based shops can not survive in suburban context because there are just not enough customers in walking distance.
Lastly, the disposal of food scraps and unsold goods are mostly going to landfill and slowly degenerated into methane to haunt our global climate even more. There has been ways to collect methane gas, a highly significant Green House Gas. However, they are not efficient enough just yet to be considered as a long term solution.
We all eat. And thanks to the wonderful gifts granted by industrial farming, at least in Australia and most developing region, we all have enough to eat. But when we are sitting around the dinner table, praise the lord for putting food on your table, lets not forget the ghost of famine is still haunting one third of human population, and it is crawling under the dark corner in the metropolis, waiting for a moment to strike.
Reference:
Donovan, Jenny. Architecture, planning and food [online]. Environment Design Guide, No. 73, Jul 2012: 1-11. Availability:<http://search.informit.com.au.wwwproxy0.library.unsw.edu.au/documentSummary;dn=659056435607544;res=IELHSS> ISSN: 1442-5017. [cited 05 Mar 16].
Image credit:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/olivia-madlock/get-smart-commune-and-gro_b_8869886.html
http://cafnrnews.com/2012/03/making-black-gold/dumping-food-waste1/
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