Food waste and loss in the agricultural value chain result in a considerable loss of edible food that could otherwise be utilized to feed people, which has an impact on food security. In areas where access to food is already scarce, this loss exacerbates food insecurity and makes people hungry. Improving food security and lowering global hunger require addressing food loss and waste.
Economic losses: For farmers, food producers, and distributors, food waste and loss represent a considerable economic loss. The resources used to produce, process, package, and transport the food are also wasted when it is wasted or lost at various points along the agricultural value chain. Businesses suffer financial losses as a result, which also lowers the agriculture sector’s overall profitability and competitiveness.
Environmental impact: Food waste and loss have a big impact on the environment. Food waste results from the loss of resources used in the growing, processing, and distribution of food, such as land, water, energy, and inputs. The production of food that is wasted has an impact on the environment since it increases greenhouse gas emissions, water use, and energy consumption. Methane, a strong greenhouse gas, and landfill trash are two more effects of food waste.
Loss of agricultural productivity: Pests, illnesses, and poor storage conditions cause food loss not only during the post-harvest and distribution phases, but also in the pre-harvest phases. Such losses decrease the effectiveness of the entire agricultural value chain and represent a waste of agricultural productivity.