"" AZMANMATNOOR: World Food Day

Sunday, October 15, 2017

World Food Day

Why World Food Day Matters
For someone who spends all her waking hours saving food from the landfill and diverting it to feed the poor and hungry, World Food Day is deeply meaningful. Suzanne Mooney, founder of The Lost Food Project, shares her story.
Malaysian soup kitchens such as Kechara feed the poor and hungry regardless of race and creed. — Filepic
Suzanne Mooney (right) with DBKL Lioence and Petty Traders Management director Zaharuddin Basiron loading surplus food from the Kuala Lumpur Wholesale Market in Selayang into the back of a truck bound for various charity homes. Lost food can be diverted to feed all of the world's hungry and Malaysia is among the leaders in South-East Asia in this effort. — Filepic
People slurping soup during La Porciuncula, a religious event where Franciscan monks serve food to the poor, at the Los Descalzos Convent in Lima, Peru. Poverty is a main cause of world hunger affecting 800 million globally. — AP

By SUZANNE MOONEY
Star2/Taste/15 October 2017
FOOD is something most of us take for granted. We wake up knowing breakfast will boost our day. A cou­ple of hours later, we might start clock-watching, eager for a lunch to break the monotony of work.
The end of the day might be spent having dinner with loved ones sharing special moments and dis­cussing important details of the day. Even religious holidays are intricately intertwined with eating (or not eating). Clearly, food is a focal point of all our lives, every day of the week.
So why do we need a day to be dedicated to food?
The importance of World Food Day
The UN World Food Day was set up to commemorate the establishment of the World Food Organisation (FAO) in 1945 after World War II. Understanding the precious nature of food, and a country’s ability to be self-sufficient (called food secu­rity) is best felt during times of conflict.
We should not take food for granted, and remember there are millions living in poverty and hun­ger. The FAO’s goals are to fight hunger and achieve food security, reduce rural poverty and promote the sustainable use of natural resources.
I believe we all need to be reminded of the real essence and purpose of food. I don’t just mean the gastronomy of how to improve your beef rendang or how to make a low-fat char kway teow so you can fit into your skinny jeans.
Food is not only essential to sustain life but is also fundamental in providing the nourishment and energy necessary for learning and growth.
Without a nourished body, you lack a nourished brain and you simply can’t learn or thrive. This results in a mammoth risk to a country’s development.
Over generations, we have devel­oped from the hunter-gatherers of . our forefathers, and slowly moved to cities to work. In this transition so many of us have lost touch with nature.
How food grows, how it is farmed, is lost to many of us - we don’t even know how to cook. Maybe it doesn’t matter because street food, coffee shops and con­venience stores selling quick and cheap meals are everywhere. Should we even care?
The simple answer is yes.
We are what we eat. Many peo­ple are becoming overweight and even obese - which is a huge health problem just waiting around the corner.
At the same time, almost 800 mil­lion people (just under 10% of the population) are undernourished, some of whom are starving to death.
Through a child's eyes
As a child I remember the terrible droughts in Ethiopia of the 1980s. I bought the Band Aid single which so many global artists recorded, and donated money to alleviate the hunger that entered our living room every night in the form of BBC news reports.
I remember crying when I saw an emaciated baby with big brown eyes looking at the camera with no hope in her eyes. She did not even have the energy to bat away insects and flies landing on her face. A few hours later, came the news that the child had died.
I could not understand why this was happening. “Can’t we just send food to these people, Mum?” I would plead. She explained that the world didn’t quite work like that - but we. could send some money and hopefully aid agencies and governments could provide long-term help.
Children are often the most prac­tical problem solvers - and I did not like this solution.
I knew all the shops and super­markets were filled to the brim with food - so why were so many people walking around like skele­tons, days away from death?
Just because they happened to be born in a particular country? It felt very wrong. And why were we not doing more about this?
This was the first time I actively remember realising what the word “inhumane” really meant.
'That's cricket'
I was not alone in my despair. Bob Geldoff, a mediocre Irish singer from a forgettable band called The Boomtown Rats, raised this issue with many governments and policy makers in the world. He highlighted the excesses of food such as the infamous “EU butter mountain” of which politicians finally acknowl­edged.
There was slight embarrassment, but that did not change the fact that there would continue to be excess food produced that was not allowed to be sold, or given away due to fiscal policies of food trade.
In Britain, there is a very unsat­isfactory explanation given to behaviour that is perhaps unsa­voury, but cannot be changed - “that’s cricket”.
Making sense of the senseless
So at the tender age of eight, I devised my own understanding of ‘lost food” - food which is good to eat, but for a number of reasons, is simply thrown away.
I learnt that many reasons can leave millions of people to die unnecessarily: regulations, trade deals, politics, logistics, or some­times it can be because it’s cheaper to throw away food than it is to go through the bureaucracy to give it to the poor.
Like most other people, I got on with my life and did not focus on the politics of food, as I was busy trying to carve out a career as a journalist.
However, I did spend some time travelling across Africa, and spent several months waitressing in a restaurant in Cape Town.
The Ferrymans experience
It was here at The Ferrymans my eyes were truly exposed to the lev­els of food waste disposed of every day. Not just the excess of every­one’s plate, but the food that had to be ready in case someone ordered (our menu was far too varied). So inevitably there was a very large binload of perfect food being trashed every single day.
It would not have been so bad, but the kitchen staff (who were the worst paid of the restaurant staff) were often underfed themselves. Most lived in shanty towns on the edge of the city. Many had families to support with absent husbands, leaky roofs and the constant need to provide food.
I suggested to the restaurant owners to donate some of this top class ‘lost food” to these women. The answer was a resounding no.
On reflection, it was for obvious reasons; this would lead to the staff over ordering, over cooking, and et cetera, to create a large pile of left­over food which they could then bring home to feed their families.
I understood that argument - but it still lay uneasy. How could we be throwing away so much food in a country where many people were so desperately under nourished? Something had to be done.
So I did some research and contacted a local soup kitchen in Cape Town. They said they would be delighted to take the food. My bosses at the restaurant agreed to donate the lost food on the following conditions: the soup kitchen should come at the same time every night, they had to bring the boxes to pack the food, and no
way was any homeless person could ever be allowed to come near our restaurant looking for food.
So we started this daily collec­tion at 10pm every night - and it worked very well - for several months. Then I left to continue my travels. With no-one pursuing the management to donate the food - they slipped back into most restau­rants’ default mode. Throw away lost food. It’s less hassle.
We are all to blame
That was 20 years ago and thankfully the world has changed. People realise that our way of life is unsustainable - our resources are running out and the population is growing. We cannot feed more people. Climate change will create climate refugees and add more pressure to global governments. South-East Asia is one of the most food insecure regions of the world. So what is the solution?
Since we throw away 33% of all food produced, there is an easy solution. We can produce less and just be clever and use the food we are currently throwing away.
It costs the Malaysian government billions of ringgit just to dispose of the 'lost food” into landfills. This is money that could be spent on health­care and education. Food products are more expensive to the customer, because companies include the cost of “lost food” in the price.
The damage to the environment is enormous. Food in packaging which is crammed into landfills creates a methane soup that damages the land, water and surrounding air. It is 20 times more damaging than the greenhouse gas carbon dioxide.
We spend much time complain­ing about the haze caused by the logging in Sumatra, but we are quite happy to contribute to this environmental hazard ourselves.
If we are honest, we are all to blame - global governments, regulators, food manufacturers, and consumers. However, the good news is that if we all decide to change our behaviour just a little, we can make a huge difference.
Currently there is enough “lost food” thrown away to feed all the hungry on the planet four times over. Maybe if we divert some of the lost food their way, it would be a good start.
Happy World Food Day.
The Lost Food Project is the first foodbank in Malaysia to have professional contracts with a number of supermarkets, manufacturers and a wholesale market They distribute 50,000 meals a month to over 40 charities, composting any donated food unfit for human consumption. Suzanne Mooney lives in Kuala Lumpur with her husband and children. To get involved, email info@thelostfoodproject.org

-800 million people go to bed hungry each night.
That's 1 in 9 people on a world popula­tion estimate of 7.6 billion today.
-98% of the world's hungry live in developing regions, mostly in Asia.
Some 550 million are in Asia and the Pacific, in countries like Indonesia and the Philippines. Another 220 million are in Africa, in arid sub-Saharan coun­tries like Ethiopia, Niger and Mali. The remaining is in Latin America and the Caribbean, in places like Guatemala and Haiti.
-75% of the world's poorest don't buy their food - they grow it.
Many poverty-stricken families depend on their land and livestock for both food and income, leaving them vulnerable to natural disasters.
Drought - as a result of climate change and unpredictable rainfall - is one of the most common causes of food shortages in the world. It causes crop failures, kills entire herds of live­stock, and dries up farmland in poor communities that have no other means to survive.
-Surprisingly, many hungry people live in countries with food surpluses, not food shortages.
The issue, largely, is that the people who need food the most simply don't have steady access to it. In the hungri­est countries, families struggle to get the food they need because of issues such as lack of infrastructure like roads and storage facilities, frequent war and displacement, natural disaster, climate change, and chronic poverty.
-1/3 of the food produced around the world is never consumed.
Much food is wasted in developing countries due to inadequate food production systems. Some of the factors responsible for food losses include inefficient farming techniques, lack of post-harvest storage and management resources, and weak market connections.
-60% of the world's hungry are women and girls.
In many places, male-dominated social
structures limit the resources women have to job opportunities, financial services and education, making them more vulnerable to poverty and hunger. This, in turn, impacts their children. A malnourished mother has an increased risk of delivering an underweight baby, which can mean physical and mental stunting right from childbirth.
-Empowering female farmers can pull 150 million people out of hunger.
Empowering women is essential to global food security. Almost half of the world's farmers are women, but they lack the same tools - land rights, financing, training - that their male counterparts have, and their farms are less productive as a result. If women and men had equal agricultural resour­ces, female farmers could increase their productivity enough to help lift millions of people out of hunger.
-Every 10 seconds, a child dies from hunger.
Poor nutrition is responsible for nearly half (45%) of all deaths in children under the age of 5 - about 3 million children die each year because their bodies don't have enough of the basic nutri­ents they need to function and grow.
-Hunger kills more people each I year than AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined.
Around 9 million people die of hunger and hunger-related diseases every year, more than double the lives taken« by AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis in 2012.
-The world produces enough food for everyone to live a healthy, productive life.
There is now 17% more food available per person than there was 30 years ago. If all the world's food were evenly distributed, there would be enough for everyone to get 2,700 calories per day - which is more than the minimum  2100 requirement for proper health.
So the challenge is not a lack of food, it's making food consistently available to everyone who needs it. - Source: mercycorps.org & FAO

Malaysian food facts that matters
- Malaysians generate 38,000 tonnes of waste per day.
-Of this, around 15,000 tonnes is food waste.
-Of this, 8000 tonnes - or about 60% - is avoidable food waste.
-And of the 8,000 tonnes, 3,000 tonnes is still edible.
-The 3,000 tonnes of food could have fed 2 million people - in other words, all the people of Kuala Lumpur.
-The average weight of our meal is 450g.
-A quarter of an average Malaysian's income is spent on food and beverag­es.
-A household of 5 people spends an average of RM900 on food.
-With 1/4 of food wasted during preparation, production and consump­tion, RM225 goes into the bin every month, or RM2,700 a year - or more than 1 month's pay to the urban worker earning the mean monthly wage of RM2,400.
-Malaysia's food import bill is between RM35 billion and RM40 bil­lion.
-Diverting food waste from landfills will not only conserve limited landfill space, but also help to reduce green­house gas emissions.
Food for thought:
A bunch of harvested bananas that falls off a truck is considered food loss. Food left to spoil, left uneaten, or discarded, is food waste.
"Food waste is about attitude and mindset, while food loss is more about technology," says Dr Ainu Husna Suhaimi, head secretariat of the MYSaveFood Initiative.
"Everyone can do our own bit to stop food waste."

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