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. 2012 Jun 6;50(2):209–227. doi: 10.1007/s13197-012-0739-3

Table 1.

Food waste within food supply chains: Quantification and potential for change to 2050

S Nr Stage Food waste/loss characteristics
1 Harvesting—handling at harvest Edible crops left in field, ploughed into soil, eaten by birds, rodents, timing of harvest not optimal: loss in food quality Crop damaged during harvesting/poor harvesting technique
2 Threshing Loss through poor technique Out-grades at farm to improve quality of produce
3 Drying—transport and distribution Poor transport infrastructure, loss owing to spoiling/bruising
4 Storage Pests, disease, spillage, contamination, natural drying out of food
5 Primary processing—cleaning classification, de-hulling, pounding, grinding, packaging, soaking, winnowing, drying, sieving, milling Process losses Contamination in process causing loss of quality
6 Secondary processing—mixing, cooking, frying moulding, cutting, extrusion
7 Product evaluation—quality control: standard recipes Product discarded/out-grades in supply chain
Packaging-weighing, labeling, sealing Inappropriate packaging damages produce Grain spillage from sacks Attack by rodents
9 Marketing-publicity, selling, distribution Damage during transport: spoilage Poor handling in wet market
10 Post-consumer—recipes elaboration: traditional dishes, new dishes product evaluation, consumer education, discards Losses caused by lack of cooling/cold storage Plate scrapings Poor storage/stock management in homes: discarded before serving Poor food preparation technique: edible food discarded with inedible Food discarded in packaging: confusion over ‘‗best before and ‗use by’ dates
11 End of life—disposal of food waste/loss at different stages of supply chain Food waste discarded may be separately treated, fed to livestock/poultry, mixed with other wastes and land filled

Source: Parfitt et al. (2010)