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Hampers of Binned Food Delivered to Mandelson and Benn in Food Waste Protest

Max Wakefield | 02.09.2009 16:16 | Climate Chaos | Ecology | World

Today (2nd September) a group of activists and skippers held a protest against the wasting of food by supermarkets by delivering hampers of binned food to the DEFRA and the Dept. for Business, Innovation and Skills.

Assembling at 11:30am at Westminster Tesco, the group began by staging protests with skipped food, banners and leaflets outside the store. At 1:30pm they arrived at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills to present a bountiful hamper of binned edible food and an open letter to a representative of Peter Mandelson, calling for a supermarket ombudsman to be established. They proceeded to DEFRA and delivered another hamper bursting with skipped food for Hilliary Benn, along with another open letter calling for various measures to curb supermarket food waste.

Tom Williams explains the food on show was chucked by Tesco to the public
Tom Williams explains the food on show was chucked by Tesco to the public

Lord Mandelson's and Mr Benn's hampers of food binned by Tesco & Sainsburys
Lord Mandelson's and Mr Benn's hampers of food binned by Tesco & Sainsburys

Matthew Butcher Delivers Hamper to Madelson's Office
Matthew Butcher Delivers Hamper to Madelson's Office

Hamper Recieved by Mandelson's Office
Hamper Recieved by Mandelson's Office

Max Wakefield preparing to deliver at DEFRA
Max Wakefield preparing to deliver at DEFRA


The group demanded that Peter Mandleson establishes a supermarket ombudsman, to ensure supermarkets bear the cost of returning previously ordered food. This recommendation, made by the Competition Commission in its recent Grocery Code Of Practice (August 2009), has yet to be enforced on unwilling supermarkets. As it stands, there is no financial incentive for supermarkets to order correct amounts of food, instead over-ordering to present bursting shelves and drive down unit costs. Using their purchasing dominance, supermarkets force suppliers and producers to bear the cost of returned food, which is then tipped into landfill. The ombudsman would also have the power to reign in supermarket dominance, particularly that of Tesco, whose superstores on average cause a net loss of two hundred and seventy six high street jobs on opening, according to their own research (1).

The letter addressed to Benn demanded that unnecessary food labeling, such as 'best before', 'sell by' and 'display until' dates, are removed and that supermarkets be forced to monitor and declare the food they waste, throughout their supply chains, setting ambitious reduction targets of no less than fifty per cent over five years. Additionally, it called on DEFRA to prevent supermarkets from rejecting food on cosmetic grounds, now possible under relaxed EU legislation.

According to DEFRA, supermarkets annually dispose of 1.6m tonnes of edible food at their high street outlets. No figures exist for the enormous amount of food wasted up and down supermarket supply chains, as they are not presently required to monitor it. A further 5.4m tonnes is thrown away by households, often due to confusing labeling on foodstuffs, none but the 'use by' date having any food safety significance. In total, according to estimates by Tristram Stuart author of Waste: The Global Food Scandal, between one third and one half of food produced for the UK is wasted. One seventh of the food waste produced in the developed world could feed the billion hungry who currently co-habit our world. According to BAPEN ( http://www.bapen.org.uk/) the UK is home to three million malnourished people. Over 20% of the UK's per capita carbon emissions are the result of the production and transportation of food, meaning up to 10% of UK emissions result from the production of food never eaten.

Many of the group involved in the action primarily rely on skipped food for sustenance while at University. They recognise that if their campaign is successful this plentiful supply of free food will dry up. Their concern for victims of food poverty – many of whom genuinely rely on skipped food for survival – means they believe unavoidable surplus should be successfully redirected through food distribution charities. FairShare, the UK's largest, believes supermarkets could increase by ten to fifteen times the amount of food they provide for such initiatives.

(1).Sam Porter, Paul Raistrick, January 1998. The Impact of Out-of-Centre Food Superstores on Local Retail Employment. The National Retail Planning Forum, c/o Corporate Analysis, Boots Company PLC, Nottingham. The NRPF was at the time financed by Tesco, Sainsbury, Marks and Spencer, Boots and John Lewis.

Max Wakefield
- e-mail: maxwak@googlemail.com
- Homepage: http://maxwak@googlemail.com

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Its ridiculous Iam sat at home with no food& will probably have to climb over a

02.09.2009 20:45

high fernce that sometimes are spiked or barbed to get perfectly good food. The supermarkets could easily formally give this away with disclaimers to more organisations & community organisations.
I am partially disabled, this week though Ive only had one tin of fruit & loaf of bread to eat, & I know theres other people in worse situations.

james


Independent Ombudsmen?

03.09.2009 09:11

Unfortunately a supermarket ombudsman chosen by the state / industry allies will almost certainly be a collbaorateur. Like the corrupt tax scamming and benefit fiddling Audit Office, the banker-led FSA, OFCOM,OFGAS, and the rest of the suit-led propaganda machines. Typical for a country where they call the police to stop food skippers, use compactors , use blue dye ( Marks and Sparks you zionazi cunts) , and even hide the skips away from the homeless/squatters/skip divers. PFI /PPP/old boys network in action.

PEye


Ombudsmen, no! Useless!

03.09.2009 13:24

I have experience of using the various Ombudsmen in my work, and they are all either collaborators or completely toothless. They are absolutely ineffectual. If they could really help citizens to assert their rights, the government would have abolished them by now. They are a diversion, and we don't need more of them.

Far better to make it compulsory for supermarkets to calculate their orders more efficiently so there is less waste, and make it legal for people to go skipping (provided, say, they don't cause any deliberate damage to get at the food). This could be a fairly simple amendment to the Theft Act - surplus food left for waste disposal by supermarkets is deemed to have no owner and therefore can't be stolen by anyone who collects it.

This is my off the cuff suggestion, and I realise it is very simply expressed. How to prevent supermarkets creating waste needs more careful thought to come up with effective suggestions that could be implemented in practice.

Annie Citizen
- Homepage: http://www.rightsandwrongsuk.blogspot.com


As above

03.09.2009 16:27

As some of the commentators above have noted, an ombudsman isn't going to do much good. The waste generated by supermarkets is inherent in the way they and their supply chains are structured. If the government is able to do something about that then good luck to them.

C