Posted: Thursday - September 9, 2021 11:23 am     
FareShare Midlands is backing the #FoodOnPlates campaign to stop millions of tonnes of fresh, unsold food from being wasted, when it could instead go to charities and community groups feeding families.
 
  • France – offers tax breaks for businesses, redistributes 6x more fresh unsold food to charities.
  • Lifeline funding that covered the additional costs faced by farmers and food producers involved in safely transporting and packing food ready to be redistributed has been axed, and calls to renew it have been rejected.
  • Without it, 53m meals worth of good-to-eat food could be wasted.
 
One in 8 people in the UK struggles to afford food - and the pandemic has resulted in many more families facing food insecurity, with 67% of charities providing emergency food aid saying they would have to continue, even as restrictions ease.
Despite this, it is cheaper for farmers to waste good-to-eat food than get it to charities putting meals onto people’s plates. France, which offers business incentives through reduced taxation for food redistribution, gets 6x more unsold food to charities.
 
WRAP estimates there is over 2m tonnes of edible surplus food in the supply chain, with the majority found on farms.
 
‘Lifeline’ UK government funding launched in 2018 that helped farmers cover the costs of getting unsold food to charities has been axed – and calls to renew it have been rejected.
 
The #FoodOnPlates campaign calls for funding of £5m a year to help farmers and food producers cover the costs of safely storing and transporting unsold food so it can be redistributed. This would enable the UK to double the amount of food delivered to those in need. Without it, 53m meals worth of food will be wasted.
During the pandemic, the FareShare network (of which FareShare Midlands is a member) distributed 19,000 tonnes worth of emergency food supplies donated by government and businesses – thanks to a campaign with ambassador Marcus Rashford – alongside over 35,000 tonnes of good to eat surplus, unsold food from farms and food producers. However, demand for food remains incredibly high – particularly for charities supporting children and families, and for those providing emergency food aid.
 
In the Midlands we distributed over three times the volume of food at the height of the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic volumes, and by the end of 2020 had sent out enough food for nearly 16 million meals via our community food members, a network of over 500 charities and community groups.
 
FareShare Midlands Director Simone Connolly, said: “The impact of COVID-19 continues to be felt by families across the region, with many still facing food, housing and employment hardships. Our community food members are trying to feed more and more vulnerable people who simply do not have enough to eat. FareShare can help these organisations provide this vital lifeline if the food industry, at scale, and not just retailers, can afford to re-direct their surplus food to organisations like ourselves. We can then redistribute this food, avoiding massive, unnecessary food waste”.
 
FareShare CEO Lindsay Boswell, said: “Our network of frontline charities has been a lifeline for families during the pandemic, and, sadly, demand now remains at similar levels.
 
“It’s a scandal that good food is left to rot in our fields or be thrown into biogas digesters or landfill when so many families are still dependent on food aid in the wake of the crisis, with thousands more unable to afford healthy fruit and veg.
 
“One in eight people struggle to afford food – and 64,000 people die from conditions related to poor diet every year. Getting healthy food from farms into our most deprived communities will help tackle the ever-widening ‘nutritional gap’ between the richest and poorest in society.
 
“France rescues six times more unsold food than we do in the UK, in part thanks to tax breaks that cover the additional costs of getting that food to charities. That’s why we’re calling on the government to reinstate lifeline funding to save good food and get it onto people’s plates.”
 
Contact: Press@fareshare.org
 
Notes:
 
To find out more about the campaign go to foodonplates.org.
 
About FareShare
 
FareShare is the UK’s national network of charitable food redistributors, made up of 18 independent organisations. Together, we take good quality surplus food from right across the food industry and get it to more than 10,500 frontline charities and community groups.
 
FareShare takes food from the food industry that can’t be sold in shops, either because of packaging errors, a short shelf life or overproduction. That food, which is the same as the food you’d eat at home, is then redistributed through a network of nearly 11,000 frontline organisations, across the UK such as homeless hostels, school breakfast clubs, domestic violence refuges, older people’s lunch clubs, food banks and hospices. We operate in every constituency in the United Kingdom.
During the pandemic, the FareShare network more than doubled its work, providing the equivalent of nearly 132 million meals last financial year – that’s 4 meals every second.
FareShare Midlands Backs National Campaign to End Scandal of Unsold Food Being Wasted | Press Releases | FareShare Midlands - Fighting hunger, tackling food waste in the UK FareShare Midlands Backs National Campaign to End Scandal of Unsold Food Being Wasted
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FareShare News

FareShare Midlands Backs National Campaign to End Scandal of Unsold Food Being Wasted

Posted: Thursday - September 9, 2021 11:23 am     
FareShare Midlands is backing the #FoodOnPlates campaign to stop millions of tonnes of fresh, unsold food from being wasted, when it could instead go to charities and community groups feeding families.
 
  • France – offers tax breaks for businesses, redistributes 6x more fresh unsold food to charities.
  • Lifeline funding that covered the additional costs faced by farmers and food producers involved in safely transporting and packing food ready to be redistributed has been axed, and calls to renew it have been rejected.
  • Without it, 53m meals worth of good-to-eat food could be wasted.
 
One in 8 people in the UK struggles to afford food - and the pandemic has resulted in many more families facing food insecurity, with 67% of charities providing emergency food aid saying they would have to continue, even as restrictions ease.
Despite this, it is cheaper for farmers to waste good-to-eat food than get it to charities putting meals onto people’s plates. France, which offers business incentives through reduced taxation for food redistribution, gets 6x more unsold food to charities.
 
WRAP estimates there is over 2m tonnes of edible surplus food in the supply chain, with the majority found on farms.
 
‘Lifeline’ UK government funding launched in 2018 that helped farmers cover the costs of getting unsold food to charities has been axed – and calls to renew it have been rejected.
 
The #FoodOnPlates campaign calls for funding of £5m a year to help farmers and food producers cover the costs of safely storing and transporting unsold food so it can be redistributed. This would enable the UK to double the amount of food delivered to those in need. Without it, 53m meals worth of food will be wasted.
During the pandemic, the FareShare network (of which FareShare Midlands is a member) distributed 19,000 tonnes worth of emergency food supplies donated by government and businesses – thanks to a campaign with ambassador Marcus Rashford – alongside over 35,000 tonnes of good to eat surplus, unsold food from farms and food producers. However, demand for food remains incredibly high – particularly for charities supporting children and families, and for those providing emergency food aid.
 
In the Midlands we distributed over three times the volume of food at the height of the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic volumes, and by the end of 2020 had sent out enough food for nearly 16 million meals via our community food members, a network of over 500 charities and community groups.
 
FareShare Midlands Director Simone Connolly, said: “The impact of COVID-19 continues to be felt by families across the region, with many still facing food, housing and employment hardships. Our community food members are trying to feed more and more vulnerable people who simply do not have enough to eat. FareShare can help these organisations provide this vital lifeline if the food industry, at scale, and not just retailers, can afford to re-direct their surplus food to organisations like ourselves. We can then redistribute this food, avoiding massive, unnecessary food waste”.
 
FareShare CEO Lindsay Boswell, said: “Our network of frontline charities has been a lifeline for families during the pandemic, and, sadly, demand now remains at similar levels.
 
“It’s a scandal that good food is left to rot in our fields or be thrown into biogas digesters or landfill when so many families are still dependent on food aid in the wake of the crisis, with thousands more unable to afford healthy fruit and veg.
 
“One in eight people struggle to afford food – and 64,000 people die from conditions related to poor diet every year. Getting healthy food from farms into our most deprived communities will help tackle the ever-widening ‘nutritional gap’ between the richest and poorest in society.
 
“France rescues six times more unsold food than we do in the UK, in part thanks to tax breaks that cover the additional costs of getting that food to charities. That’s why we’re calling on the government to reinstate lifeline funding to save good food and get it onto people’s plates.”
 
Contact: Press@fareshare.org
 
Notes:
 
To find out more about the campaign go to foodonplates.org.
 
About FareShare
 
FareShare is the UK’s national network of charitable food redistributors, made up of 18 independent organisations. Together, we take good quality surplus food from right across the food industry and get it to more than 10,500 frontline charities and community groups.
 
FareShare takes food from the food industry that can’t be sold in shops, either because of packaging errors, a short shelf life or overproduction. That food, which is the same as the food you’d eat at home, is then redistributed through a network of nearly 11,000 frontline organisations, across the UK such as homeless hostels, school breakfast clubs, domestic violence refuges, older people’s lunch clubs, food banks and hospices. We operate in every constituency in the United Kingdom.
During the pandemic, the FareShare network more than doubled its work, providing the equivalent of nearly 132 million meals last financial year – that’s 4 meals every second.

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