Families receive free food hampers at our Drive Thru

With food, rent, energy costs and interest rate rises continuing to push more Victorians into severe food insecurity in the lead-up to Christmas, we ran an emergency public Drive Thru on Sunday, 4 December.

We had 1,600 cars come through the Drive Thru sites in at the in Epping and Dandenong to receive free hampers with fresh food and pantry staples. No questions asked.

Thanks to an incredible effort from our staff and volunteers, and Chobani and Melbourne Market staff, we were able to provide hampers to Victorians doing it tough.

Tia’s story 

Centrelink pays Tia $776 a fortnight and her rent is $740. Leaving her just $26 for food. 

Tia thought she was lucky. She had three wonderful young sons, worked in her dream job, and had just secured a loan for a new car. Finally, things seemed to be going her way. The last few years had been hard, dealing with being a working single parent, a relationship breakdown and health concerns always in the back of her mind.

Could You Write a Grocery List for $26 a Fortnight?

Many years ago Tia found out that she had a lesion in the front and central part of the brain, causing irregular brain patterns. With symptoms like epilepsy, it’s been hard to forget a diagnosis like this, especially as the sole caregiver to her children. 

Past medical issues aside, Tia had been working as a flight attendant with both SkyWest and Virgin Australia for eight years, which to her wasn’t just a job, but a lifestyle she loved.  

It was on a fateful day in 2015 when Tia was asked to lift heavy cabin baggage by her captain, which should never have come on the flight, that she herniated and ruptured a disc in her spine in Kalgoorlie. To make matters worse, as the flight neared Perth, the plane suddenly dropped into an air pocket which further aggravated Tia’s injury. 

Being a single mum with young children at home, she really felt she didn’t want to make a big deal of the incident at the time for fear of losing out on additional shifts. 

Her life is very different now. It was Tia’s birthday recently and she had carrots and potatoes for dinner. Her children send her money every now and then because they’re slightly older now but she says that while she is so grateful to them, she feels as though she has failed them. She says the relentless fortnightly struggle to make ends meet affects her mental wellbeing. 

Due to the nature of her injury, Tia had to apply for a disability pension because she had to have multiple surgeries, was pumped with a huge amount of painkillers, then rehabilitation. As a result, she was advised to seek compensation, “You get treated very badly, like a criminal” Tia said.  

The compensation eventually came through, $50,000, which initially sounds like a large sum of money but considering she had just lost her income and was a single parent who had to keep a household going, it was not a lot at all.  

At this point Tia had been through multiple surgeries, and had been put on so much medication that she felt like a zombie, when she asked the doctors for another surgery to insert a device called a spinal cord stimulation in her back which has electrodes that go up her spinal fluid and send pulses which change the way the brain interprets the feeling of pain and turns it into a tingle, meaning she would come off the heavy medication, she couldn’t get the operation in the public system. This meant that the money that she got as compensation went straight into funding that operation. 

The blows continued to come. As she was unable to work, she contacted the car dealer she purchased her new car from to return it, realising that she still owed $42,000 on the car loan because of the interest, knew she was in a really tough position and after getting some free financial advice she had to declare herself bankrupt.  

Tia has applied for countless jobs but because she is not as mobile as she once was, she gets let go soon after being hired even after declaring her condition. 

Since then, Tia has been unable to secure disability payments from Centrelink as the letters her doctors write to Centrelink about her condition aren’t satisfactory to them but she can’t afford to see another specialist to have another letter drafted about her condition, for which there is no further treatment available, due to the cost of a specialist consultation. The waitlist for Sir Charles Gardiner is years long because of COVID-related delays. Centrelink pays her $776 a fortnight and her rent is $740.  

Tia’s $26 a fortnight usually goes towards making sure her service dog, and other furry friend don’t go without, before she looks after herself. Her service dog is essential for Tia’s safety, because while the lesion on her brain hasn’t grown for years now, she frequently falls down and has passed out in the middle of the street or alone in her home. 

Tia is new to Foodbank WA and thinks that because of soaring petrol prices, she will only be able to afford to come out once a fortnight but is grateful for the small wins. “It’s just it’s been a lifesaver to come to a place like this. I just appreciate it so much, it’s been a saviour,” Tia says of coming to visit us. 

Tia says that she is a strong woman, against all odds, she is always going stand up and find a way to keep going, be thankful for the small mercies and not take anything for granted. 

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Manor Lakes is a suburb in Melbourne, 33km south-west of Melbourne’s Central Business District, located within the City of Wyndham local government area with a population of 12,675.

Manor Lakes P-12 College opened in 2009 and is built on a large site, combining Primary and Secondary schools and including a Supported Learning Centre. There are around 3,000 students enrolled at the school, split evenly between Primary and Secondary.

The College is committed to improving learning outcomes and pathways for their students and is committed to the ongoing creation of a community of responsible learners who have a belief in their ability to learn and succeed.

The School Breakfast Clubs Program has become an important part of achieving these commitments, providing students with healthy food to support better learning outcomes and a sense of community with the provision of Home Food Pack Hampers for families in the school community.

FBV Manor Lakes SBCP Women serving

Breakfast Clubs catering to different audiences

The sheer size of Manor Lakes College provides the unique challenge of catering to different school sectors with specific requirements. Bec Collins, Community Connections Manager said, “We need to accommodate the different needs of each area of the school. The Primary School Breakfast is served at a window and only offers grab and go items and the Secondary program is in our community centre with a combination of grab and go and other make-yourself and self-serve items. Our supported learning centre breakfast is set in a kitchen where the students have more autonomy to choose foods, preparing the food themselves in the kitchen.”

Manor Lakes wants to ensure that the Breakfast Program is not just providing food to students, but also provides a sense of community within the school. To achieve this the College invited the local Community Police to attend a Primary School Breakfast Club, with the objective to build the relationship with the students and their local police patrol. The kids loved meeting the Police up-close, and in such a positive environment.

FBV Manor Lakes kids in their uniform and two police officers all smiling

Hamper Project run by the kids

The Manor Lakes school community is always top of mind for Bec Collins. When a Supported Learning class was looking for a volunteering project to complete a school assignment, Bec had the solution!  The class could not find the right project within the community, so they decided to take control of planning, developing and delivering Home Food Pack Hampers for the school community.

“We gave the kids full control of the Hampers,” said Bec. “They had to plan how to manage the project, order the food, pack the Hampers, develop marketing material to tell the school about the free Hampers and finally deliver the Hampers directly to the families.”

The Hamper project, which the class called Helping Hampers, provided the class with a myriad of learning opportunities, including:

  • Planning
  • Creating a name for the project
  • Mathematical order projections
  • Marketing collateral copy writing
  • Marketing collateral design (posters, flyers, Facebook posts)
  • Group work when packing the Hampers, determining roles
  • Recipe card development
  • Quality control
  • Delivery coordination (location, setup and rostering)
  • Communication skills directly with families.

The class project was very successful, providing around 250 Hampers to families in need from the school community. The school families loved receiving the free Hampers and are hoping the class will run the project again. The families also loved the recipe cards that the class put into the boxes, giving them ideas on how to use the food provided. Well done Manor Lakes!

FBV Manor Lakes SBCP Hamper packing 1

Feedback from the school community

Parents:

“It’s a great place for my son to make friends with other children who aren’t in his class.”

“If my daughter is running late in the morning, it’s great to know she can grab breakfast at school.”

“Sometimes things at home are really tight for food, and this takes the pressure off at times.”

 

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“We love the toast and milk!”

“I love coming and getting breakfast with my friends.”

“I love vegemite toast, it’s my favourite.”

“I don’t have time at home to have breakfast, so it’s good to be able to eat when I get here.”

“I get to school really early and I like to have something to eat.”

Furry friends not forgotten when times are tough 

Wednesday 30th November,2022: With the cost of living crisis affecting more and more people with every week that passes, households with pets have emerged as more likely to be experiencing food insecurity.  

The Foodbank Hunger Report 2022 highlighted that on any given day, more than half a million households are struggling to put food on the table. Of those, 67% have pets, meaning they are not only struggling to feed themselves, but also their pets. 

Today, Foodbank launched its inaugural Foodbank Pet Care Day to acknowledge and thank the generous donors in the pet care industry who ensure the food relief organisation can offer pet food and pet care products for food relief recipients’ furry friends so that no-one – including a treasured pet– goes without in households facing tough times.

dog wearing a purple foodbank apron

Foodbank Australia CEO, Brianna Casey, is a dog owner herself and recognises that for many, pets are seen as loved and loyal family members. We know how important pets are for those who are struggling with loneliness and social isolation, and the last thing we want is for people to have to give up their pets when they have lost so much else in their lives.”

Foodbank is so grateful for the kindness and generosity being shown by wonderful petcare partners, Mars Petcare, Royal Canin and Nestle, who donate Pedigree and Purina among other productsto ensure our four-legged friends aren’t forgotten when times are tough”

Ms Casey said.

Together, Foodbank’s national petcare partners have generously donated nearly 2 million kilograms of pet care products over the past five years.  

“From working dogs on farms to rescue cats in rental properties, Foodbank is pleased to be able to make pet food available nationwide” Ms Casey said. 

Foodbank’s inaugural Pet Care Day, celebrated on the 30th November, is aiming to raise awareness of food insecurity in homes with pets and to thank the generous support of the many national and state donors who help ensure these furry friends do not go without. 

Droopy_FBA

We couldn’t do what we do without you.

Mars Petcare lockup RGB

Royal Canin logo

Purina logo

PetCareDay FBA 1

Urgent food donation tax reform needed to help fight cost of living crisis and deliver sustainability outcomes

Foodbank VIC staff carrying a foodbank box of food donation

Wednesday 23rd November 2022: Australia currently wastes more than 7.6 million tonnes of food each year costing the economy over $36.6 billion. Of this, 70 percent is perfectly edible and redirecting it to food relief would potentially deliver a social return of $2 billion at a time when the demand for food relief has never been higher.

Despite the clear environmental, social and economic benefits of donating food to food relief, Australia’s current tax framework does not motivate food producers to donate excess stock. In fact, in tax terms, donating is no different to recycling or sending to landfill even though it may cost the company more.

Foodbank Australia CEO, Brianna Casey said,

It is ludicrous that our tax system does not reward hard-working farmers and small business transporters who contribute invaluable products and services to food relief. We should be making it easier to donate rather than dump perfectly good produce that may not look quite right, and one of the ways we can do that it by making sensible changes to our tax system to incentivise food donation.

Foodbank is recommending that Australia’s tax settings be recalibrated to incentivise donations to food relief. Experience in other countries, including the USA, France, Canada and the Netherlands, shows that tax incentives are the most effective way to increase the redirection of food donations to food relief.

KPMG Australia : bell peppers placed in big trays

The tax incentive proposal, developed by KPMG Australia with the support of the Fight Food Waste Cooperative Research Centre and Australia’s food relief sector recommends a two-tiered tax incentive based on the ability to offset a percentage of costs related to food donations from taxable income. Its aim is to encourage food producers to donate surplus product to food relief rather than sending it to landfill.

KPMG has now completed a follow-up project where it consulted widely with the food industry to determine the feasibility and potential effectiveness of the proposed tax incentive. Interviews were conducted with 33 companies representing both national and local businesses along the whole food supply chain. The overwhelming message is that there is whole-of-sector support for the scheme. In fact, companies are highly passionate about the potential of the incentive to really shift the dial on redirecting surplus to food relief.

Australia has set itself an ambitious target of halving food waste by 2030, and with only 7 years to go, we need the Australian government to take bold and decisive action, including the introduction of a National Food Donation Tax Incentive

Ms Casey said.

eggplant in heart shape

In addition to contributing to sustainability goals, the proposed incentives would provide support to small to medium enterprises, particularly farmers and small businesses in transport and logistics, stimulating regional economies and mitigating some of the economic impacts of labour shortages, natural disasters and the cost-of-living crisis.

Fight Food Waste CRC Chief Executive Officer Dr Steve Lapidge says the research and subsequent proposal show the power of collaboration in addressing Australia’s food waste challenges.

“This research was led by one of Australia’s biggest financial organisations, KPMG, in conjunction with one of its biggest food relief organisations, Foodbank. To meet Australia’s goal of halving food waste by 2030, it’s partnerships like these, coordinated through the Fight Food Waste CRC, that will have the biggest impact not only on the amount of food we waste but just as importantly on the lives of millions of Australians who are food insecure,” said Dr Lapidge.

Australia Facts: 2 million households went hungry

The Foodbank Hunger Report 2022 highlighted that over 2 million Australian households were severely food insecure in the last 12 months and on any given day 306,000 households are receiving assistance from food relief organisations. The cost-of-living was cited as the main factor for those experiencing food insecurity, placing added demand on food relief organisations such as Foodbank as the crisis escalates.

Organisations supporting this incentive represent leaders of Australia’s food and grocery supply, manufacturing, retail and transport sectors as well as agricultural, rural, social service, public health and food waste research peak bodies. Many of these organisations and their members currently donate to food relief organisations, which distribute food and grocery items to thousands of charity organisations and schools.

Every $1 will help provide 2 meals

Hunger relief charity thanks Aussie farmers for invaluable support

woman transferring a bucket of apple in a big tray

(Image provided by Montague)

Friday 18th November: 18.5 million kilograms. That is the amount of home grown, fresh Aussie produce that was generously donated to Foodbank from Australian farmers and growers last year.

Today, on National Agriculture Day, Foodbank is celebrating and thanking our country’s hardworking farmers and growers for their ongoing support to the food relief organisation to ensure those struggling have access to nutritious, fresh produce year-round.

With so many farming communities across the eastern states enduring relentless flooding and the loss of would-be bumper crops, the generosity shown by farmers and growers in supporting the most vulnerable in our community is even more significant.

In 2021, Foodbank sourced the equivalent of 86.7 million meals for essential food relief, 30 percent which was sourced directly from Australia’s world-renowned agricultural industry. More than 30 percent of Foodbank’s total food relief volume is distributed to rural, regional and remote areas, allowing the food relief charity to give back to the very communities who – in good times – are some of the most generous food donors to Foodbank.

Foodbank Australia CEO, Brianna Casey said,

We live in one of the richest nations in the world. We produce enough food to feed our population three times over. Yet, on any given day in Australia, more than half a million households are struggling to put food on the table.

“We cannot thank our incredible farming communities enough. They continue to support the work we do even while facing devastating natural disasters that don’t seem to ease up.”

Foodbanks in NSW and Victoria continue to pack and distribute emergency food relief hampers and pallets of fresh produce which have been making their way to flood-affected areas across Victoria and NSW for the last two months, on top of ongoing food relief to assist with recovery from previous disaster events.

“Our thoughts are with all the communities struggling at the moment, and in particular those close-knit, vibrant communities facing unfathomable devastation as a result of these latest floods. We want these communities to know that Foodbank will be right there with them as long as needed to help these towns get back on their feet.”

fruits in a black tray carried by a foodbank volunteer

“This year, Christmas is a luxury we can’t afford” – Melita.

Melita vowed to give her kids everything she never had, after having a terrible start to life when she was abandoned by her own mother as a young girl and lived a life of abuse and neglect.

But with ever-increasing costs and doing it all on her own, things are just too tough. And it’s not like she isn’t giving it her best.

Melita is a go getter. She is always trying to make life better for her kids. She wants to set a good example for them and break the terrible cycle of abuse and poverty that she’s experienced. But with prices sometimes doubling for things we all consider ‘the basics’ she’s struggling.

Every day, the hardest part of that struggle is not being able to put enough food on the table for her children.

“I cried in the supermarket and hid my face in the packets of flour… thinking ‘please don’t recognise me’ because I couldn’t , no matter how much I tried, adjust my budget. I couldn’t get everything we needed,” Melita, Foodbank Recipient.

This Christmas will be particularly tough for Melita. She is already dreading what most would consider a special day.

There’ll be no gifts for her kids – that’s a given. But there will also be no fancy lunch. No chocolates or lollies in the stockings. No treats at all – just the basics to get them through.

Thousands of mums, just like Melita, are questioning whether to celebrate at all – because they simply can’t afford to.

Christmas shouldn’t be considered a luxury people simply can’t afford. Sadly, so many families are thinking this way with just weeks until the big day.

Melita holding bills

Of course, like all loving parents, Melita tries to keep the struggles of filling the pantry away from her kids. She doesn’t want them to have the same worries that she has – but her daughter Madison has started to notice.

“I can pick up what’s going on… I realise ‘Oh, mum seems really stressed out today.’ It breaks my heart because I know she’d do anything for us,” Madison, Melita’s daughter.

It’s hard to even imagine the stress of mums like Melita, trying to figure out how to keep their kids’ tummies full. Melita’s son Luke has less than fond memories of some of the meals she has rustled up in the past.

Potato mash for a week straight wasn’t particularly popular. Pasta dishes with no sauce weren’t a favourite either. But they know that their mum, just like thousands of other mums and dads throughout Victoria, is doing the best she can.

With Foodbank by her side, Melita is working hard to make life better for her and her kids. She has already completed her Diploma of Community Services and is again looking for work. With support from people like you, Melita has been able to access food – without judgement, and more importantly, without that knot in her stomach wondering how she will feed her kids. She can focus on moving forward and not being stuck in a rut.

“That’s why I like the Foodbank trucks so much because you don’t have that stigma attached to it. It feels more like a community get-together,” Melita said.

FBV XMAS22 Melita receives hamper from Foodbank

Be an angel at the table this Christmas

a group of cyclists during Hunger Ride March 2022

Not just another ‘blokes on a bikes’ gig!

When Foodbank held its first Hunger Ride in 2018, the organisation was feeding 140,000 Victorians a month. Cue the pandemic, bushfires, floods, and the worst cost of living crisis in two decades and it’s now feeding 100,000 every two days.

That’s why Tour de France yellow jersey winner Simon Gerrans is set to lead 27 cyclists on the ride of their lives up Mt Buffalo on November 19 to help raise urgently needed funds for food relief.

Gerrans, along with SBS Tour de France commentator Matt Keenan, and executives from big-hearted Victorian businesses, has been motivated by what’s happening in this state.

“You don’t ride 184 kms with 21kms of that grinding up Mt Buffalo unless you’ve got a fire in your belly,” says Gerrans. “When 365,000 Victorian kids are living in homes where there’s not enough food, those kms aren’t so tough knowing you’re raising money to feed them.”

Foodbank CEO Dave McNamara knows the riders are feeling a heightened sense of urgency. “Victorians are going through such a tough time, and having these businesses pushing themselves on their behalf, is going to help expand our capacity to relieve some of that pressure. They’re inspirational, really.”

Major sponsor Bennelong Funds Management is involved once again with global CEO Craig Bingham more passionate than ever about why the ride is not just another date in the calendar. Bingham, who is also the Chair of Cycling Australia, has been hands on from the start, working with Foodbank on every aspect from planning to saddling up for the gruelling event course.

“Foodbank has set a challenge for the seven teams to raise 32,000 meals each” explains Bingham. “We know their colleagues are right behind them, but any extra help from the wider community is going to pump up the volume Foodbank can deliver. If every cyclist in Victoria donated just $1 to any of our riders, we’d raise over four million meals for people in need…which would be incredible.

SUPPORT THE HUNGER RIDE

Check out the highlights from The Hunger Ride in March 2022 below!

Food relief sector calls on state & territory governments to follow NSW lead on demand for federal tax reform

Australian Food Relief Sector preparing fruits

Tuesday 8th November 2022: The Australian food relief sector welcomes the recommendation in the NSW parliamentary report into food production and supply in NSW, that the NSW Government should advocate for tax reform at the federal level on food donations, and calls on other State and Territory Governments to add their voices to the growing call for this smart policy approach.

The Foodbank Hunger Report 2022 highlighted that over 2 million Australian households were severely food insecure in the last 12 months, yet the country currently wastes more than 7.6 million tonnes of food each year, costing the economy over $36.6 billion. Of this food, 70% is perfectly edible and redirecting it to food relief would potentially deliver $2 billion in social return.

Despite this, Australia’s current tax framework does not motivate food producers to donate excess stock. In fact, in tax terms, donating is no different to recycling or sending to landfill even though it may cost the company more. Foodbank Australia CEO, Brianna Casey says,

We recommend tax settings be recalibrated to incentivise donations to food relief. Experience in other countries, including the USA, France, Canada and the Netherlands, shows that tax incentives are the most effective way to increase the redirection of food donations, to food relief.

In addition to contributing to sustainability goals and helping hungry Australians, the proposed incentives are invaluable, SecondBite CEO Steve Clifford says, “This policy would provide support to small to medium enterprises, particularly farmers and small businesses in transport and logistics, stimulating regional economies and mitigating some of the economic impacts of labour shortages, natural disasters and the cost-of-living crisis.”

The tax incentive proposal, developed by KPMG with the support of the Fight Food Waste Cooperative Research Centre, recommends a two-tiered tax incentive based on the ability to offset a percentage of costs related to food donations from taxable income. Its aim is to encourage food producers to donate surplus product to food relief rather than sending it to landfill.

Hamper boxes from Foodbank

According to OzHarvest CEO, Ronni Kahn AO:

Given that food waste is a significant problem facing Australia we need powerful policy levers including tax changes to ensure food feeds people rather than going to landfill. We need to see action from all levels of society and particularly from the federal government on this policy.

MEDIA RELEASE

Thursday, 29 September 2022

New food waste initiative to help millions of food insecure Australians

 Australian businesses and the Australian government can help strengthen food rescue, help feed food insecure Australians, and minimise the environmental impacts of food waste, latest Sector Action Plan from Stop Food Waste Australia outlines. 

Food rescue plays a critical role in Australia meeting its stated target of halving food waste by 2030 while also helping address the growing need for food relief. In 2021, Australia’s food rescue sector redirected or repurposed more than 80 million kilograms of good-quality food and redistributed it as meals for millions of food insecure Australians. 

fruit and vegetable clip art

The Food Rescue Sector Action Plan has been co-designed and developed with Australia’s four biggest food rescue charities – Foodbank, OzHarvest, SecondBite and FareShare. The Plan outlines key interventions in research, policy, business collaboration and education that will help support and strengthen food rescue, reduce food waste across the supply chain and assist food insecure Australians. 

The Sector Action Plan aims to increase surplus food captured for redistribution, highlighting key initiatives for both the food rescue sector and policy-makers, primary producers, manufacturers, retailers, transport and logistics organisations and other associated parties, including: 

  • Improving tax incentives to encourage donations of surplus food and essential services to the food rescue sector. 
  • Establish a collaborative steering group within the sector to discuss and prioritise actions and develop a workable plan for the sector to implement. 
  • Enhance research initiatives to improve collective understanding of the sector and current food rescue models and systems, and investigate alternative models of food rescue and distribution of surplus food. 
  • Partner with the Australian Food Pact Signatories – comprising some of Australia’s biggest food businesses – to embed food donation into business practices and food waste reduction targets. 

 

 

Stop Food Waste Australia Chief Executive Officer Dr Steven Lapidge says the value of Australia’s food rescue sector cannot be understated. 

“Food rescue is a unique approach to reducing food waste because it also has the fundamental co-benefit of reducing food insecurity,” Dr Lapidge says. 

foodbank Hamper packages

Australians continue to waste more than 7.6 million tonnes of food every year – 70% of which is edible. At the same time, one in six Australian adults haven’t had enough to eat in the last year, and 1.2 million Australian children have gone hungry.

Stop Food Waste Australia Chief Operating Officer Mark Barthel says the Sector Action Plan offers a path for increasing the amount of food redistributed to vulnerable Australians and diverted from landfill – contributing to Australia’s target of halving food waste by 2030. 

“The Food Rescue Sector Action Plan highlights the importance of collaboration with and between the biggest food rescue charities, the government and business partners to ensure good-quality surplus food is donated to the people who need it and not wasted. 

a hand receiving fruits

 “Food rescue is such an important sector for us and the progress we’ve made as part of developing the Plan in a few short years has been truly impressive and driven by a group of very passionate people with a strong sense of purpose. 

“We are also working with a growing number of food businesses, like signatories to the Australian Food Pact, to prevent food from being wasted and to maximise the potential for any surplus food that does exist to be donated to the food rescue sector, through partnerships that are in place and strong.” 

Sarah Pennell, General Manager of Business at Foodbank Australia and member of the Food Rescue Sector Action Plan Steering Committee says,

This work will have a positive impact on the lives of millions of Australians who are currently food insecure. It will have a similarly positive impact on helping to reduce this country’s food waste.

For the food rescue sector itself, having Stop Food Waste Australia bring us together to work on this has been game changing.

The release of the Food Rescue Sector Action Plan aligns with the United Nations’ International Day of Awareness of Food Loss and Waste (Thursday, September 29). Stop Food Waste Australia is proudly working towards the UN Sustainability Goal 12.3 to halve food waste by 2030 and acknowledges that this cannot be achieved without the support and commitment of its partners. 

The Food Rescue Sector Action Plan is the second in a series of sector plans developed by Stop Food Waste Australia, following the Food Cold Chain Sector Action Plan released in July 2022. Sector Action Plans provide targeted insights and interventions for food waste ‘hotspots’. The plans are co-designed to address food waste in collaboration with those most able to affect direct change and tackle the root cause(s) of food waste and to support action to reduce food waste in the value chain. 

For more information on the Food Rescue Sector Action Plan: stopfoodwaste.com.au/Sector-Action-Plans