JERUSALEM, Nov. 14 (Xinhua) -- A national report on food waste published Monday found that 2.6 million tons of food had been wasted in Israel in 2021 at the cost of about 21.3 billion shekels (6.21 billion U.S. dollars).
The wasted food is equivalent to about 37 percent of Israel's annual food production by volume, showed the report, which was initiated by the Ministry of Environmental Protection and Israel-based food rescue organization Leket Israel, and written by accounting and consulting firm BDO Israel.
For a country of some 9.5 million population, this means the wasted amount could have fed about 3.5 million individuals for a year, said the Leket Israel.
The environmental cost of food loss and waste reached 3.6 billion shekels last year, including the loss of natural resources, polluting gas emissions, and waste treatment. Meanwhile, about 42 percent, or 7.5 billion shekels worth of the wasted food, is salvageable and edible, the report explained.
Detailing the economic, social, and environmental benefits of saving food, the report said such an endeavor can save 5 billion shekels per year for the Israeli economy.
It thus recommended policy tools such as setting a national target of reducing food waste by 50 percent by 2030, tax incentives, and mandatory food donations.
"Through a government-wide move, we can meet the challenge," Israeli Environmental Protection Minister Tamar Zandberg was quoted as saying. ■