Thanksgiving Day is celebrated annually in North America on the fourth Thursday of November and originally took place to commemorate the harvest season and blessings of the past year. The tradition that began in the 17th century has since transformed into a holiday celebrating community as families and friends gather to enjoy a large feast. Although whole turkeys and other hearty sides are what people look forward to enjoying, most food goes to waste.
It is estimated that roughly one pound of food per person, totaling up to 305 million pounds of food, is wasted just from Thanksgiving dinner in the United States of America. This food waste is in addition to the average of 1,160 pounds of food wasted by each American family annually.
Wasting food doesn’t just impact our wallet and the health of humanity but can also impact the environment negatively. Food production involves lots of energy, labor, land, and water during each stage before being brought into a personal kitchen. Some of the resources are renewable, while others are not which further heightens the importance of minimizing waste. Another environmental reason to avoid food waste is that once discarded, rotten food in landfills can produce methane, a greenhouse gas more potent and harsher than carbon dioxide.
From a social perspective, wasting food is a disservice to the hundreds of thousands of individuals experiencing homelessness, undernourishment, and other instability that prevent them from being able to afford nutritious food regularly. With the economy suffering from inflation, routine food waste continues to separate the less fortunate from their next meal. This also means that the one pound of food waste per American person could feed those in need rather than be thrown away.
So now that we have the facts, what can we do to help the problem at hand as a collective? Some simple tips that we can begin implementing this Thanksgiving include the following: only buy what you need, save food scraps, store or donate leftover food, and compost food not safe for consumption.
Thanksgiving is the season of giving back to your loved ones and expressing gratitude for the year before it ends! This Thanksgiving, take the time to educate those around you about the importance of minimizing food waste for a better tomorrow.