Tesco CEO urges everyone to cut down on food waste - from farms to consumers own homes

A mountain of carrots: Society as a whole are told to be less wasteful with produce
A mountain of carrots: Society as a whole are told to be less wasteful with produce

In a keynote speech at the Global Summit of the Consumer Goods Forum in Cape Town, Tesco CEO Dave Lewis encouraged business to do more to tackle food waste.

He called on the wider industry to publish their food waste data in order to make meaningful progress.

Appealing for action across the food industry, Dave Lewis urged collaboration in tackling food waste right across the supply chain – in farms, distribution, in supermarket operations, and in customer’s own homes.

"A key part of this agenda is transparency", the CEO said.

Tesco has published data on food waste in its own operations since 2013, and the approach has proved instrumental in helping identify hotspots in order to tackle root causes.

He called on companies, in the short term, to do more to redistribute their surplus edible food waste to people in need.

Earlier this year, Tesco pledged its commitment to redistribute all of their edible food waste from stores to charities by the end of 2017.

He told the audience: "Tackling food waste makes sense for business, it will help people and our planet, and it’s also the right thing to do."

Actions put forward

• Cutting time out of the supply chain to provide customers with fresher produce that lasts longer;

• Widening specifications to take much more of the crop, maximising the amount of fresh produce supermarkets can sell in stores. A new range of ‘wonky’ fruit and vegetables, called ‘Perfectly Imperfect’, was launched by Tesco in February;

• Publishing data on food waste to identify hotspots and tackle problems;

• Redistributing edible food to people in need, with a commitment to give away all surplus edible food waste to charities and people who need it; and

• Introducing simpler to understand date coding, and ending ‘buy one, get one free’ offers on fruit and vegetables.

Food waste facts

• A third of the world’s food is wasted – 1.3 billion tonnes;

• Almost a billion people – one in nine globally – go to sleep hungry;

• Food loss and waste costs the world $940 billion per year in unnecessary costs;

• The healthiest food is often the most wasted – in the UK around 800,000 tonnes of fresh veg and salads are wasted annually; and

• More than 13 billion ‘5 a day’ portions of fruit and vegetables were thrown away in 2012, enough to provide more than 7 million people with their ‘5 a day’ for a year.

'Champions 12.3', a coalition of leaders from government, businesses, international organisations, research institutions, and civil society will work to create political, business and social momentum to halve food loss and waste around the world by 2030.

It aims to inspire action by leading by example, motivating others to reduce food waste and communicating the importance of food loss and waste reduction.