- cross-posted to:
- dataisbeautiful@mander.xyz
- dataisbeautiful@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- dataisbeautiful@mander.xyz
- dataisbeautiful@lemmy.world
publication croisée depuis : https://feddit.org/post/3142575
The UNEP estimates that in 2022, the world produced 1.05 billion tonnes of food waste across the retail, food service and household sectors. The average amount of food waste per capita that year is estimated to be 132 kg, of which 79 kg was household waste.
Fascinating to note, despite all the inefficiencies in capitalist food distribution and how horrifying entire dumpsters full of stale bread or “spoiled” vegetables are, roughly 60% of all food waste occurs at the household level, that is, because of the decisions of individual consumers on how they handle their own food at home.
The next time someone tries to argue “individual consumption doesn’t matter” I’ll have to cite this chart.
“individual consumption doesn’t matter” is green “your vote doesn’t matter”
Anyone have any ideas why Brazil’s per capita is so high?
And Russia’s so low?
No idea how its being calculated but if it takes into account food lost during transport, tons of food spoil during transport in Brazil due to the terrible infrastructure for goods.
This is household food waste and the study also inclues retail and food services.
My own uneducated guess would be weather. But I’m sure it is something else.
And how is China so high? Do they just throw shit away all the time?
I mean, China’s per capita waste is similar to that of the United States or Germany, so presumably they throw roughly as much shit away per person as the US - it’s just that, having four times The people, they naturally throw away four times The shit.