FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: November 15,
2012
MEDIA CONTACT: David Yogi, yogi.david@epa.gov, (415)
972-3350
EPA Honors Calif., Nev., Ariz. Universities
for Pledge to Significantly Reduce Food Waste
Eighteen
Schools Pledge Multi-ton Waste Reduction
SAN FRANCISCO – In celebration today of America Recycles Day
2012, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announces the participation of 18
California, Nevada, and Arizona universities in EPA’s national Food Recovery
Challenge. An event is being hosted by the University of California, Berkeley,
one of the first participants to join the Food Recovery Challenge.
The Food Recovery Challenge is a voluntary
program that aims to limit the 34 million tons of food wasted nationwide
annually by reducing unnecessary consumption and increasing donations to charity
and composting. By participating, these schools, with a combined 460,000 student
enrollment, pledge to reduce food waste by five percent in one year.
“Food waste is a particular problem for
California, the world’s fifth largest food supplier, because of the enormous
quantities of water and energy required for production,” said Jared Blumenfeld,
EPA’s Regional Administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “EPA is proud to partner
with these universities as they commit to support the environment and their
community by reducing food waste.”
As participants, the 18 schools—University of
California Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Merced, Riverside, San Francisco, Santa
Barbara; and Santa Cruz; California State University Fullerton, Humboldt and
Northridge; University of Southern California; City College San Francisco;
Arizona State University; Northern Arizona University; University of Arizona;
and University of Nevada Las Vegas and Reno—join 42 other colleges and
universities nationwide in pledging to reduce wasted food. In addition to higher
education institutions, other participants include grocers and entertainment
venues, such as the Los Angeles Dodgers stadium.
Nationally,
food is the single largest material sent to landfills, accounting for 25 percent
of all waste sent to landfills. When excess food, leftover food, and food scraps
are disposed of in a landfill, they decompose and become a significant source of
methane, a potent greenhouse gas. In turn, limiting wasted food will reduce
methane emissions.
The Food
Recovery Challenge is part of EPA’s Sustainable
Materials Management Program, which seeks to reduce
the environmental impact of food and other widely-used everyday items through
their entire life cycle, including how they are extracted, manufactured,
distributed, used, reused, recycled, and disposed.
For
more information on the Food Recovery Challenge, visit: http://www.epa.gov/foodrecoverychallenge/
For additional
information on EPA’s Sustainable Materials Management Program, visit: http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/conserve/smm/index.htm
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