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A painless way to achieve energy savings: Stop wasting food

How to save energy through both societal and individual actions.

A painless way to achieve energy savings: Stop wasting food

Unread postby Graeme » Sat 02 Oct 2010, 20:58:12

A painless way to achieve huge energy savings: Stop wasting food

Scientists have identified a way that the United States could immediately save the energy equivalent of about 350 million barrels of oil a year — without spending a penny or putting a ding in the quality of life: Just stop wasting food. Their study, reported in ACS' semi-monthly journal Environmental Science & Technology, found that it takes the equivalent of about 1.4 billion barrels of oil to produce, package, prepare, preserve and distribute a year's worth of food in the United States.

Michael Webber and Amanda Cuéllar note that food contains energy and requires energy to produce, process, and transport. Estimates indicate that between 8 and 16 percent of energy consumption in the United States went toward food production in 2007. Despite this large energy investment, the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that people in the U.S. waste about 27 percent of their food. The scientists realized that the waste might represent a largely unrecognized opportunity to conserve energy and help control global warming.

Their analysis of wasted food and the energy needed to ready it for consumption concluded that the U.S. wasted about 2030 trillion BTU of energy in 2007, or the equivalent of about 350 million barrels of oil. That represents about 2 percent of annual energy consumption in the U.S. "Consequently, the energy embedded in wasted food represents a substantial target for decreasing energy consumption in the U.S.," the article notes. "The wasted energy calculated here is a conservative estimate both because the food waste data are incomplete and outdated and the energy consumption data for food service and sales are incomplete."


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Re: A painless way to achieve energy savings: Stop wasting f

Unread postby Pops » Sun 03 Oct 2010, 08:08:30

A quick search indicates the average American consumes 3,800 calories daily. We could probably save a lot of energy just by going on a diet
The legitimate object of government, is to do for a community of people, whatever they need to have done, but can not do, at all, or can not, so well do, for themselves -- in their separate, and individual capacities.
-- Abraham Lincoln, Fragment on Government (July 1, 1854)
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Re: A painless way to achieve energy savings: Stop wasting f

Unread postby hillsidedigger » Sun 03 Oct 2010, 09:50:48

Residential food waste is not wasted if it's composted and used.

Of course, many people live in urban areas where that might not be possible.

Suburban people can compost as can rural although my 2 step-son-in-laws who even garden a little have yet to appreciate the wisdom of not throwing their and their family's food wastes into the garbage can along with everything else to haul to the county waste collection facilities.

At my place the garbage bags are not full of messy, rotting food.

Still, I imagine the great majority of food waste occurs in during processing, packaging, transporting and retailing long before reaching the residential level.

A lot is also wasted in restaurants and fast food outlets.
Last edited by hillsidedigger on Sun 03 Oct 2010, 10:14:10, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: A painless way to achieve energy savings: Stop wasting f

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 03 Oct 2010, 09:57:41

It's easiest to eat most of the food rather than waste it. If you're worried about wasting, cook less food. Many vegetable parings, bones, etc can be made into soup. The bones themselves once the food value has been removed can be buried in the garden or if you don't have a garden, placed in the trash. Worm bins are good for turning inedible food scraps into nice clean plant food.
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