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Showing Original Post only (View all)Food waste: People misread 'use by' label; 40% of U.S. food is tossed [View all]
Many consumers read an items sell-by date as an indicator of when the food will spoil. But its an inaccurate assumption, according to a study conducted by the Natural Resources Defense Council and Harvard Law Schools Food Law and Policy Clinic.
Manufacturers use sell-by dates to help retailers manage their inventory. It encourages stores to sell a product within a specific time frame so that the item still has a shelf life once its purchased.
Not even the common best before and use by labels indicate a deadline after which products go bad, according to researchers. Instead, they are producer estimates of how long the food will be at peak quality.
Expiration dates are in need of some serious myth-busting because theyre leading us to waste money and throw out perfectly good food, along with all of the resources that went into growing it, said Dana Gunders, an NRDC staff scientist. Phrases like sell by, use by, and best before are poorly regulated, misinterpreted and leading to a false confidence in food safety.
The misunderstanding comes at a steep price. Last year, the NRDC found that Americans throw out as much as 40% of the countrys food supply each year, adding up to $165 billion in losses.
Food waste makes up the largest portion of solid trash in landfills, according to researchers.
http://www.latimes.com/business/money/la-fi-mo-food-expiration-labels-20130918,0,5071689.story
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Food waste: People misread 'use by' label; 40% of U.S. food is tossed [View all]
Liberal_in_LA
Sep 2013
OP
Fast food and regular restaurants, schools, hospitals, and all the retail and wholesale outlets.
NYC_SKP
Sep 2013
#4
A lot does not go to landfills but goes instead to livestock or composting facilities.
NYC_SKP
Sep 2013
#41
The 40% figure includes estimates from farm to table as well as consumer loss.
Gormy Cuss
Sep 2013
#45
growing up i thought skim milk was GROSS. years later, i switched to it and didn't have
dionysus
Sep 2013
#32
Yup. As long as you smell the food and it doesn't smell bad, chances are it is still good
quinnox
Sep 2013
#6
OMG - my friends give me such a hard time if I do this, I finally freeze most of the bread and take
hollysmom
Sep 2013
#63
Preparing us for when we must consume inferior products "that are actually fine."
WinkyDink
Sep 2013
#15
Except "not to waste" is antithetical to the consumerist society in which we live.
WinkyDink
Sep 2013
#54
I'm always buying "outdated" food! I buy the majority of our meats at the clearance meat bins
BoWanZi
Sep 2013
#17
Unless it stinks, has a fur coat, or talks back to me, I will usually eat it.
Behind the Aegis
Sep 2013
#24