Identifying the links between consumer food waste, nutrition, and environmental sustainability: A narrative review

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Abstract

Emerging research demonstrates unexpected relationships between food waste, nutrition, and environmental sustainability that should be considered when developing waste reduction strategies. In this narrative review, we synthesize these linkages and the evidence related to drivers of food waste and reduction strategies at the consumer level in the United States. Higher diet quality is associated with greater food waste, which results in significant quantities of wasted resources (e.g., energy, fertilizer) and greenhouse gas emissions. Food waste also represents waste of micronutrients that could otherwise theoretically fill nutritional gaps for millions of people. To make progress on these multiple fronts simultaneously, nutrition professionals must expand beyond their traditional purview, into more interdisciplinary arenas that make connections with food waste and environmental sustainability.

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Conrad, Z., & Blackstone, N. T. (2021). Identifying the links between consumer food waste, nutrition, and environmental sustainability: A narrative review. Nutrition Reviews, 79(3), 301–314. https://doi.org/10.1093/nutrit/nuaa035

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