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Food waste management and circular economy in Mediterranean cities

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    Brochure, flyer, fact-sheet
    Food waste management and circular economy in Mediterranean cities
    Webinar Agenda, 25 May 2022
    2022
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    This series of technical webinars is organized to leverage the knowledge and expertise of a network of researchers, development practitioners and decision-makers. The webinars aim at strengthening knowledge sharing and stimulating debate around themes relevant to food systems transformation in the Mediterranean, peer exchange about recent research and study findings, as well as showcasing successful and inspiring actions to promote the operationalization of food systems approaches. Also in the framework of the Urban Food Agenda, this webinar will bring together stakeholders from across the Mediterranean to share practical experiences of their engagement in circular economy practices for food waste management at urban/local level. Tackling food waste and circularity from diverse angles of the Mediterranean food systems, they will reflect on success factors and challenges, and discuss ways to facilitate partnerships and replication of solutions across the Mediterranean. The webinar will aim to address a key question: how can Mediterranean cities ensure multi-stakeholder engagement in food waste management and applied circular economy practices?
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    Save Food Cities
    Reducing food losses and waste in urban centres through sustainable and circular bioeconomy
    2019
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    Urbanization, higher incomes and lifestyle changes continue to raise demand for locally sourced fresh foods, but maintaining their quality along the supply chain is a major challenge. In low-income countries, inadequate harvesting, handling, logistics, technology and cooling are causing persistent post-harvest losses. Also, as more countries reach middle-income status, food waste increases, particularly in urban areas, and disposal in landfill results in methane emission. A lack of coordination, financial and human resources, as well as the capacity for disposing of and recycling food waste and packaging, is causing alarming levels of fresh-water contamination. Investment in food loss and waste reduction can deliver monetary and other benefits. This programme will support a sustainable and circular bioeconomy, where waste streams from agriculture, forestry, fisheries and the food and feed industry are integrated into the circular economy. A key focus will be innovation to ensure safe and nutritious food supply chains, the revalorization of food by-products and the management of packaging and non-edible food parts.
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    Consumers and Mediterranean diet: towards food systems transformation
    Webinar outcomes, 26 January 2023
    2023
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    During this webinar, organized by the SFS-MED Platform and held on 26 January 2023, stakeholders from across the Mediterranean shared experiences and successful cases from the consumer perspective, including on transparent information and consumer education and innovative pathways for sustainable public procurement. Panelists and speakers highlighted how consumers should be at the center of all elements of the food system, from food research to food production and procurement, as well as food industry, environments and marketing. The discussion was instrumental in demonstrating that empowering consumers to make informed food choices is key to enabling the transformation of Mediterranean food systems. In this context, the Mediterranean diet can be a strategic resource for driving transformative change, with its environmental, social, cultural, health and economic benefits. Education for sustainable consumption enables individuals and social groups to become actors of change by providing knowledge, values and skills to make environmentally friendly, ethically sound, and responsible decisions as consumers. Moreover, involving consumers in research and innovation processes (consumer-driven data) is needed to better understand their needs and preferences. Finally, targeted policy frameworks and multi-stakeholder partnerships can leverage public food procurement schemes to promote the Mediterranean diet, while supporting local economies and environmental sustainability.

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