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A systematic review of food losses and food waste generation in developed countries
Author(s) -
Paul van der Werf,
Jason Gilliland
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
proceedings of the institution of civil engineers - waste and resource management
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.401
H-Index - 38
eISSN - 1747-6534
pISSN - 1747-6526
DOI - 10.1680/jwarm.16.00026
Subject(s) - food waste , per capita , agricultural economics , supply chain , environmental science , food consumption , food supply , food chain , bespoke , food processing , consumption (sociology) , business , economics , environmental health , engineering , waste management , food science , medicine , paleontology , population , social science , chemistry , marketing , sociology , advertising , biology
The objective of this systematic literature review was to compile and assess food losses and waste estimates, from developed countries, across the food supply chain. The methodology involved systematically identifying studies and extracting, compiling and analysing their estimates of food losses and waste. Of the 55 estimates extracted, from these studies, the most (43·6%) were from the consumption (average 114·3 (kg/capita)/year) part of the food supply chain. On average, total food losses and waste were 198·9 (kg/capita)/year. While this review revealed a high degree of variability of estimates and inconsistent trends for the independent variables: scope of food waste, geography and study methodologies; food waste generation, at the consumption part of the food supply chain, was significantly higher for North American compared with European estimates (p = 0·003); and significantly higher (p = 0·030) for indirect than direct estimates. Similarly, total food waste generation indirect estimates were signif...

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