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Next time you’re in the school lunchroom, try an experiment. Stand by the garbage when people clear their trays. Watch as the food piles up.
There are the mixed vegetables no one ever eats.
There are the pizza slices with the pepperoni picked off.
There are the chicken nuggets that looked good before they landed on the plate.
Now imagine this scene repeated everywhere from Maine to California.
Every day, Americans waste about 345 million pounds of food. Most of it goes into the trash. There, it has a lot of company. Worldwide, we throw out about one-third of all the food produced every year. That’s enough to cover all of New York City in a pile of rotting, stinking garbage up to our waists. How is this possible? Welcome to the problem of food waste.
Stand near the garbage in your school lunchroom. Watch people clear their trays. Watch the food pile up.
You’ll see mixed vegetables. No one eats them.
You’ll see pizza slices. Only the pepperoni was eaten.
You’ll see chicken nuggets. They weren’t so tasty.
This happens everywhere from Maine to California.
Every day, Americans waste about 345 million pounds of food. Worldwide, we throw out one-third of all the food produced every year. You could cover New York City with all of that rotting food. It would go up to our waists. How can this be? Welcome to the problem of food waste.
Next time you’re in your school lunchroom, try this experiment: Stand by the garbage when people clear their trays and watch as the food piles up.
There are the mixed vegetables nobody ever eats.
There are the pizza slices with the pepperoni picked off.
There are the chicken nuggets that looked yummy before they landed on the plate.
Now imagine this scene repeated everywhere from Maine to California.
Every day, Americans waste about 345 million pounds of food, with most of it going into the trash. There, it has a lot of company—worldwide, we throw out one-third of all the food produced every year. That’s enough to blanket all of New York City in a pile of rotting, stinking garbage up to our waists. How is this possible? Welcome to the problem of food waste.