Equipment & Technology

How Businesses, Consumers and Policymakers Can Make the Future of Food Sustainable

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Adopting sustainable production practices on a global scale is imperative to safeguard the future of a planet with a growing population, according to Nicolai Prytz, sustainability and strategy director at Leuven, Belgium-based TOMRA Food. The food supply chain is certainly one area where there is urgent need for improved sustainability, because without food society as a whole becomes unable to function.”

TOMRA’s point man on sustainability strategy, who has been on the job since August of 2019 following almost three years working with EY Norge (formerly known as Ernst & Young) in Oslo and about three years with the World Bank as carbon and finance consultant and climate change specialist, has looked carefully at how businesses, consumers and policymakers can help make the future of food sustainable. His analysis follows.

Nicolai Prytz

System inefficiencies in the food sector also cause an unnecessary output of energy during production, which amplifies the undeniably negative impacts of climate change on agriculture, including unstable growing conditions for many crops and an overall reduction in the volume of produce from arable land. These issues, coupled with the rise in global population and demand for food, represent significant areas of concern for the food industry – from farm to fork.

Action needs to be taken both to reduce food waste and tackle climate impacts in and from the food supply chain. The key to make the future of food sustainable is the early adoption of best practices across the supply chain, for which technological innovation can be a major driver.

Need for Sustainability

Sustainability can be defined as “meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” For corporations, this is not just about introducing environmentally friendly initiatives, as some may perceive. It is about protecting and utilizing resources efficiently and effectively.

The UN expects world population to rise by two billion people over the next 30 years. With this increase in numbers comes the need to boost the amount of food produced, which will inevitably increase both the amount of agricultural land needed and food waste generated across the supply chain, and greenhouse gas emissions from food production.

This is where food sustainability is key, to mitigate the negative impacts of increased production and ensure that food supplies are not exhausted for future generations.

Fight Against Food Waste and Loss

According the World Resources Institute, almost a quarter of food produced for human consumption goes uneaten. This waste and loss is created across the entire supply chain, including production, handling, storage, processing, distribution and consumption. An important distinction can be made between food “loss” in the production process and food “waste,” which occurs in the food consumption and retail stage.

Globally, the causes for the food waste and loss differ from continent to continent. In North America and Europe, where the annual waste and loss combined is roughly 100 kilograms per consumer, food waste (i.e. consumption stage) accounts for more than half. In comparison, only 5% of food waste and loss combined in Sub-Saharan Africa is related to consumption, and the rest is lost during the production, handling and storage stages of the supply chain.

Although food loss may be higher in developing countries, the need to make improvements earlier in the supply chain is of global concern. International industry collaboration must focus on ensuring that food loss is reduced throughout the farming and sorting process in order to use as much of what is produced as possible.

As for production-side food waste, repurposing of produce is a key solution. If an apple or a blueberry does not have high enough quality for one use, one must find another use for it and make wasting the produce the very last resort. Sensor-based sorting systems can determine, for example, the quality level of a product, and thus allow for lower quality products to be reworked until they are fit for another purpose, such as pet food or animal feed.

TOMRA sorting and grading solutions can help increase the yield of produce by between 5-10%, which when put into context equates to as much as 25,000 trucks of potatoes every year. This allows food producers and processors to maximize yields and recovery rates, while reducing waste and improving the overall quality of the produce.

The company’s sorting solutions can also help clean up crops that in the past would not be harvested, if damaged by adverse weather events like hail, strong winds or torrential rain. Such events typically mean that incoming defect loads are high, but sensor-based cleaning of these damaged crops, together with removing subtle defects, has a strong positive impact on the shelf life of produce.

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions

In addition to the challenges of waste and loss, the food industry must also take responsibility for reducing greenhouse gas emissions and the negative climate impacts caused by the food supply chain. The current environmental crisis in the Amazon rainforest, where wildfires are releasing vast amounts of stored CO2 into the atmosphere, is yet another testament to the urgent need for emission reductions – not only in food, but across all sectors.

The food industry sits at the very core of several environmental issues. According to some measurements, it is responsible for nearly two-thirds of global biodiversity loss and is a major contributor to climate change. Agriculture currently accounts for 12 Gt of CO2 per year of global carbon emissions, a number projected to rise up by more than 50% by 2050. If unchecked, that level of emissions would represent more than 70% of the available carbon ‘budget’ in order to reach the targets set forth in the Paris Agreement.

One area with significant room for improvement is transport and the distance that food travels from farm to fork. Consumer demand has led to an expectation that all produce is available 365 days a year and the understanding that seasonal produce must be imported from around the world to meet demand.

What foods are consumed also must be addressed. In its annual report, the World Resources Institute (WRI) has outlined how the food industry can reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) output and become more sustainable, in light of expectations for population growth and food demand in 2050. It calculates that by decreasing the amount of beef and lamb eaten and instead eating more fruit and vegetables, emissions can be significantly reduced.

However, the WRI also states that the food supply chain must increase the productivity of livestock and crops to “higher than historic levels” – in short, increase the supply of food, but reduce the land usage for a more sustainable output. Using innovative technologies and farming methods that lower agricultural GHG emissions is one of the recommendations in WRI report.

Enter TOMRA Eco Steamer Peeler

The TOMRA Eco steamer peeler has been designed with reducing energy output in mind, and offers a sustainable way to produce food. This machine can lower energy usage by 25%, which could translate to savings of up to $90,000 per year for production businesses, as well as helping reduce water usage (28% less steam compared to similar machines).

Innovative sorting solutions also allow for defective produce to be removed from the supply chain before it is frozen. This is a common practice for fruits, and can help reduce energy usage and optimize yields. In other words, sorting technologies have great potential to strengthen both profitability and sustainability for many food companies.

Sustainable Future for Food

Achieving a sustainable future for the food industry will mean that the way food is produced and handled, from farm to fork, must change. With the world population set to increase to nearly 10 billion people over the next 30 years, the industry must adapt and adopt new practices to reduce waste, cut greenhouse gas emissions and ensure that agricultural land is used as sustainably as possible.

Demand for food likely will rise by 50% over the next three decades, so meeting these challenges is vital to ensure food sector sustainability for future generations. TOMRA is committed to do its part by helping improve yields, reduce waste and use food resources more efficiently.

“Through working and collaborating with governments, policymakers and businesses, we can help improve the sustainability of the food supply chain and create a prospering food sector for the future,” said Prytz.

About TOMRA

TOMRA Food designs and manufactures sensor-based sorting machines and integrated post-harvest solutions for the food industry, using advanced grading, sorting, peeling and analytical technology. Over 8,000 units are installed at food grower stations as well as vegetable, fruit, potato, meat, poultry, seafood, nut, grain and seed packing and processing plants around the world.

The company is a member of the Oslo, Norway-headquartered TOMRA Group that was founded in 1972 to build and supply reverse vending machines (RVMs) for automated collection of used beverage containers. It employs more than 4,000 people worldwide and rang up NOK 8.6 billion in sales last year.