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A comparative study of food waste management in full service restaurants of the United Kingdom and the Netherlands.

Authors :
Filimonau, Viachaslau
Todorova, Ekaterina
Mzembe, Andrew
Sauer, Lieke
Yankholmes, Aaron
Source :
Journal of Cleaner Production. Jun2020, Vol. 258, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The EU-28's food service sector generates excessive amounts of food waste. This notwithstanding, no comparative, cross-national research has ever been undertaken to understand how food waste is managed in restaurants across the EU-28. This study contributes to knowledge by presenting a first attempt to conduct a comparative analysis of restaurant food waste management practices in the UK and the Netherlands. It finds that although restaurateurs in both countries use demand forecasting as a prime approach to prevent food waste, forecasting does not always work. When this happens, food waste management programmes such as repurposing excess foodstuffs, redistribution of surplus food and consumer choice architecture are mostly considered commercially unviable. To improve the effectiveness of food waste management in the food service sectors of the UK and the Netherlands it is necessary to ensure that food waste mitigation becomes a corporate target for restaurateurs and the progress towards its achievement is regularly monitored by top management. This corporate commitment should be facilitated by national policy-makers, but also by EU regulators, by raising consumer awareness of food waste, incentivising surplus food redistribution and enabling food waste recycling. • Examines approaches to managing food waste in full service restaurants. Compares the food consumption markets of the UK and the Netherlands. • Demand forecasting, staff meal preparation and passive disposal dominate in both markets. • Good practices in managing food waste are available but not widely used. • These are the re-purpose of surplus ingredients, on-site food waste recycling, portion control and food-to-go boxes. • Determinants of (broader) cross-national application of these good practices are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09596526
Volume :
258
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Cleaner Production
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142686943
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.120775