Dumped Milk, Smashed Eggs, Plowed Vegetables: Food Waste of the Pandemic

PJMilano

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In Wisconsin and Ohio, farmers are dumping thousands of gallons of fresh milk into lagoons and manure pits. An Idaho farmer has dug huge ditches to bury 1 million pounds of onions. And in South Florida, a region that supplies much of the Eastern half of the United States with produce, tractors are crisscrossing bean and cabbage fields, plowing perfectly ripe vegetables back into the soil.

After weeks of concern about shortages in grocery stores and mad scrambles to find the last box of pasta or toilet paper roll, many of the nation’s largest farms are struggling with another ghastly effect of the pandemic. They are being forced to destroy tens of millions of pounds of fresh food that they can no longer sell.


The closing of restaurants, hotels and schools has left some farmers with no buyers for more than half their crops. And even as retailers see spikes in food sales to Americans who are now eating nearly every meal at home, the increases are not enough to absorb all of the perishable food that was planted weeks ago and intended for schools and businesses.

The amount of waste is staggering. The nation’s largest dairy cooperative, Dairy Farmers of America, estimates that farmers are dumping as many as 3.7 million gallons of milk each day. A single chicken processor is smashing 750,000 unhatched eggs every week.

Many farmers say they have donated part of the surplus to food banks and Meals on Wheels programs, which have been overwhelmed with demand. But there is only so much perishable food that charities with limited numbers of refrigerators and volunteers can absorb.

And the costs of harvesting, processing and then transporting produce and milk to food banks or other areas of need would put further financial strain on farms that have seen half their paying customers disappear. Exporting much of the excess food is not feasible either, farmers say, because many international customers are also struggling through the pandemic and recent currency fluctuations make exports unprofitable.



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Kinguno

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It moves like clockwork and once something messes with a gear it all fukks up

Don’t look into farming it’s gross a bunch of animals and plants super bred for this

If you do want to look google KFC Chicken they literally created a chicken that grows fast with big thighs and big breast that is basically hairless
 

acri1

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This is a smaller version of what happened in the Great Depression. Lots of people on the street went hungry yet farmers at the time were literally throwing away food.

Doesn't bode well for the future. We need a president to get on some FDR shyt, but that certainly won't happen with Cheeto.
 

feelosofer

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Nothing you can do. the fact of the matter is restaurants and schools are the main consumers of US farms and without large volume restaurants to take in all that supply it can't go anywhere. The government needs to subsidize transportation costs because there are a lot of hungry people this food could go out to.
 
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Professor Emeritus

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Nothing you can the fact of the matter is restaurants and schools are the main consumers of US farms and without large volume restaurants to take in all that supply it can't go anywhere. The government needs to subsidize transportation costs because there are a lot of hungry people this food could go out to.
At home and abroad. With as little output as is going around right now in other sectors it would certainly be possible for the government to get this shyt shipped out to people who need it, but that wouldn't do anything to help corporate profits and if it doesn't help profits then they really don't care.
 

dora_da_destroyer

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Man, it says they’ve donated what they can and can’t really export it. It’s perishable food. So unless you expect them to track down individual households and mail shyt out - not happening ever, and not in the midst of an infrastructure stressed by a pandemic - not sure what else they can do.

this type of food waste happens in households nationwide as well. Double edge sword, you want to eat fresh foods, but if you don’t get to them in time, they go bad.
 

acri1

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Man, it says they’ve donated what they can and can’t really export it. It’s perishable food. So unless you expect them to track down individual households and mail shyt out - not happening ever, and not in the midst of an infrastructure stressed by a pandemic - not sure what else they can do.

this type of food waste happens in households nationwide as well. Double edge sword, you want to eat fresh foods, but if you don’t get to them in time, they go bad.

I'm sure a lot of this food could be stored for later use. You could maybe have the government buy up the food and put it into storage for distribution later.
 
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