(Press-News.org) Globally, the average person wastes around 132 kg of food per year, and this number is rising. Wealthy countries waste more food per person, but in an opinion paper publishing September 26 in the Cell Press journal Cell Reports Sustainability, agricultural economists highlight how urbanization and economic expansion are driving increases in food waste in lower- and middle-income countries. Curbing food waste will require policy and structural initiatives, they argue, such as incentivizing supermarkets and restaurants to donate food and educating consumers to promote smarter purchasing and better food storage practices.
“If left unaddressed, rising waste in middle- and low-income countries risks locking in unsustainable consumption patterns with serious implications for food security, public health, and environmental stability,” write the authors, agricultural economists Emiliano Lopez Barrera and Dominic Vieira of Texas A&M University.
“Proactive investments such as in cold chain infrastructure, food donation laws, and public awareness can help shape social norms before food waste becomes entrenched,” they write. “Inaction today will magnify long-term costs and increase the difficulty of future interventions.”
Global food waste—defined as food discarded by consumers or by food service and retail establishments—rose by about 24% between 2004 and 2014. Historically, wealthy people and high-income countries wasted more food. While this is still true today, rates of food waste are becoming more similar across all countries. According to a 2024 report, annual food waste varies by only around 7 kg per person across high-, upper-middle-, and lower-middle-income countries.
The authors say that this convergence is driven by rising food waste in middle-income countries such as China, India, and Brazil that are undergoing rapid economic growth and urbanization. Urbanization increases food waste by changing people’s shopping and consumption habits. For example, access to supermarkets and refrigeration encourages people to buy more perishable food than they can use.
“Urban households tend to generate more food waste than rural ones, as rural communities more often repurpose discarded food,” they write.
Supermarkets also waste significant amounts of food: the authors note that in Brazil, supermarket chains reported losses of R$6.7 billion ($1.2 billion USD) from food waste in 2018 alone. And refrigeration during transport has shifted when and where food waste occurs, resulting in more food being wasted in consumers’ homes.
“These patterns underscore the need to complement cold chain expansion with consumer education on proper food storage, portioning, and planning to avoid shifting food waste burdens onto urbanizing middle-class households,” the authors write.
Regardless of a country’s wealth, the researchers say that reducing food waste will require collaborations between governments, retailers and food producers, research institutions, communities, and consumers. They suggest implementing awareness campaigns that emphasize portion control and leftover repurposing and incentives to encourage composting, alternative waste uses, and community-level food sharing and donation. They also underscore the importance of incorporating food-waste strategies into broader sustainability and equity efforts.
“A more comprehensive, globally coordinated strategy—anchored in country- and region-specific policy interventions—is needed to mitigate impacts and foster progress toward more sustainable food systems,” the authors write.
###
Cell Reports Sustainability, Barrera and Vieira, “The global convergence of food waste: A growing sustainability challenge” https://www.cell.com/cell-reports-sustainability/fulltext/S2949-7906(25)00192-2
Cell Reports Sustainability (@CellRepSustain), published by Cell Press, is a monthly gold open access journal that publishes high-quality research and discussion that contribute to understanding and responding to environmental, social-ecological, technological, and energy- and health-related challenges. Visit https://www.cell.com/cell-reports-sustainability/home. To receive Cell Press media alerts, contact press@cell.com.
END
Medicaid reimbursement often falls short of actual treatment costs, leaving trauma centers on the front lines of the gun violence epidemic to absorb substantial losses
Study authors concerned Medicaid funding cuts could further strain trauma centers
Costs stayed flat through 2019, then rose 33% from 2019 to 2021, coinciding with a rise in firearm injury during the pandemic
CHICAGO --- The initial hospital treatment of firearm injuries cost the U.S. health care system an estimated $7.7 billion between 2016 and 2021, with the largest share falling on urban trauma center hospitals that serve the highest proportion ...
Cancer cells are relentless in their quest to grow and divide, often rewiring their metabolism and modifying RNA to stay one step ahead. Now, researchers at the UCLA Health Jonsson Comprehensive Cancer Center have identified a single protein, IGF2BP3, that links these two processes together in leukemia cells. The protein shifts how cells break down sugar, favoring a fast but inefficient energy pathway, while also altering RNA modifications that help produce the proteins leukemia cells need to survive and multiply.
The discovery, published in Cell Reports, positions IGF2BP3 as a “master ...
Food insecurity is more common among children with a chronic medical condition than those without one, a new study suggests.
The prevalence of food insecurity remained higher in this group even after adjusting for key family and household characteristics, including income, education and employment status, according to the Michigan Medicine-led research in JAMA Network Open.
“Our study suggests that children with chronic conditions should be prioritized in efforts to reduce the harms of food insecurity,” said lead author Nina Hill, M.D., a postdoctoral research ...
About The Study: Disparities in workplace safety are a significant contributor to racial and ethnic health disparities. Addressing both occupational concentration and within-occupation disparities is essential for improving workplace safety and reducing health inequities among workers.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Michael Dworsky, PhD, email mdworsky@rand.org.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.3495)
Editor’s Note: Please see the article for ...
About The Study: This cross-sectional study suggests that despite increasing clearance of artificial intelligence (AI)/machine learning (ML) devices, standardized efficacy, safety, and risk assessment by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are lacking. Dedicated regulatory pathways and post-market surveillance of AI/ML safety events may address these challenges.
Corresponding Author: To contact the corresponding author, Ravi B. Parikh, MD, MPP, email ravi.bharat.parikh@emory.edu.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamahealthforum.2025.3351)
Editor’s ...
Stroke patients evaluated using telemedicine (telestroke) have higher odds of receiving essential treatment, yet it takes them significantly longer to be treated — potentially limiting the benefits, a Michigan Medicine-led study finds.
Researchers evaluated more than 3,000 patients with ischemic stroke, the most common type, who were potentially eligible for treatment with thrombolysis.
The study used data from 42 hospitals in the Paul Coverdell Michigan Stroke Registry, a program funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that measures, tracks and aims to improve the quality ...
The Madden–Julian Oscillation (MJO), as a key driver of global weather and climate anomalies, is an important source of subseasonal predictability. However, most climate models still struggle to reproduce its fundamental characteristics, posing a critical challenge that urgently needs to be addressed in climate prediction. Previous studies have pointed out that the convective adjustment timescale (tau) is one of the key parameters affecting MJO simulation in climate models, but its sensitivity ...
A groundbreaking study published in the journal Current Pharmaceutical Analysis has uncovered the potential of essential oil compounds from the Plectranthus neochilus plant to serve as effective antidiabetic agents. The research, conducted by Hamadou Mamoudou and colleagues, utilized molecular docking and pharmacological analysis to evaluate the interaction of these compounds with dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4), a crucial enzyme in type 2 diabetes management.
The study identified citronellyl butyrate as the compound ...
Current Pharmaceutical Analysis (CPA) is a distinguished journal in the field of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis. Published by Far Publishing Company, CPA provides a platform for researchers to share their latest findings and advancements. The journal publishes full-length articles, short reviews, and original research papers covering all aspects of pharmaceutical and biomedical analysis. It focuses on the entire process from drug discovery to clinical application, aiming to advance every aspect of pharmaceutical science.
CPA has made significant progress in recent years. With an impact factor of 1.5 and a CiteScore of 1.7, the journal has ...
In limbless animals, propulsion across flat terrain depends on three synergistic elements—a highly deformable soft body, rhythmic axial contractions that travel along the body, and directional friction with a lower coefficient at the front than at the rear—which together generate sufficient thrust and grip. Inspired by this principle, numerous bio-inspired soft robots have separately advanced body-shape actuation, end anchoring, or kirigami-skin friction modulation, achieving crawling on uniformly rough surfaces, inside pipes, and through granular media; yet a unified platform that simultaneously integrates “deformation–friction coupling–steering” ...