2nd All Africa Post-harvest Conference
During the 2nd All Africa Postharvest Congress &
Exhibition at the headquarters of the African Union Commission in Ethiopia
Wageningen University and Research had the opportunity to share in several
sessions the newly established worldwide hotspot analysis as developed in the
CCAFS project.
Figure 1: WUR (Xuezhen Go, Jan Broeze) |
This high-level analysis specifies Food Loss and Waste and
related Greenhouse Gas Emissions per product category and activity along the
chain in the different regions in the world. Hans Hoogeveen, ambassador and
permanent representative of the Netherlands to the UN Organizations for Food
and Agriculture in Rome, adopted the approach and recommended in his keynote
speech in the opening session and as a panelist this as a new approach towards
food loss and waste, looking beyond the loss volumes but include Greenhouse Gas
Emissions because this will affect future policy agendas related to climate
change. (see figure 1)
According to our most recent (and scientifically founded) data food loss
and waste contribute 20 to 25% of food production related greenhouse gas emissions.
From a climate perspective, all food loss and waste do not induce equal
emissions. Bovine meat, dairy, and rice are top greenhouse gas same climate footprint and same hotspot
crops. Currently, the top 3 polluting countries are China, India, and the United
States of America. Apart from Nigeria, African countries still have a relative
low climate footprint compared to countries in Industrialised Asia, South- and
South East-Asia, Europe and the US. However, Africa has a high loss
volumes of staple food crops like roots and tubers, see figure 2.emitting
food categories.
Naturally, not all countries in the world have the
According to FAO’s recent overview
of food security and nutrition in Africa:
- approximately 1 in every 5 people of the population of the African continent is undernourished;
- Africa has remained the most food insecure continent in the world;
- compared to 2015 hunger in Africa continues to rise, especially in Western- and Eastern Africa, after many years of decline;
- climate change is a present and growing threat to food security and nutrition in Africa.
To ensure
Africans’ food security priority should be given to the reduction of food loss
and waste and especially to the reduction of loss in roots and tubers. Next to
that, Africa has a growing middle class moving into the big cities. This
migration goes hand in hand with a change of diets. Increased consumption of
milk and bovine meat of this growing middle class is the prediction. This is
likely to go along with an increase of African’s food loss and waste related
greenhouse gas emissions. With current food loss and waste percentages for
those food categories this would also induce huge food loss waste induced
greenhouse gas emissions. Interventions in these supply chains are essential to
lower the losses. We expect that the necessary interventions will be driven by
opportunities in upcoming middle and upper markets.
Well intended interventions to reduce food loss and waste
can go along with negative trade-off’s like the increase of greenhouse gas
emissions through energy use, packaging material use, etc. With our recently
developed decision support Agro-Chain Greenhouse gas Emissions Calculator (ACGE Calculator) we can
guide industries and policies makers to identify the most optimum interventions
considering both food loss and waste and greenhouse gas emissions.
This work
is implemented as part of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural
Research (CGIAR) Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food
Security (CCAFS), which is carried out with support from CGIAR Fund Donors and
through bilateral funding agreements.
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