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Danish initiative to combat food waste launched in New York

Stephen Gadd
September 20th, 2017


This article is more than 7 years old.

Denmark is exporting its sustainability know-how to a wider audience

Larsen told the US audience: Don’t bin it, use it (photo: Flickr/US Department of Agriculture)

In a speech at the Rockefeller Foundation headquarters in New York today, the Danish environment and food minister, Esben Lunde Larsen, took the opportunity to present food waste reduction goals to an assembled international audience.

‘World Food Summit – Roadmap to 2030’ sets out ways in which household food waste could be reduced by 50 percent by 2030.

The document was one of the results of ‘World Food Summit – Better Food for More People’, an international top-level conference in Copenhagen in August.

READ ALSO: Denmark inks new global food initiative

At the meeting today – which was held under the auspices of World Resources Institute, an international NGO – were key players such as Rajiv J Shah, the president of the Rockefeller Foundation, and top people from Tesco, Kellogg’s and Ikea Food.

Breakfast of champions?
The institute has established an international coalition of prominent decision-makers and opinion-formers that they call ‘champions’. The idea is that these people will keep the pressure up to help achieve the UN’s goals on sustainability.

The environment and food minister is one of the champions, along with Selina Juul, the founder of the food waste prevention movement Stop Spild af Mad, and Michael LaCour, the MD of Ikea Food.


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