CHICAGO (WLS) — A sense of urgency can be felt on the floors of the Northern Illinois Food Bank in Geneva.
Volunteers vigorously work to sort and box up food for donation. But despite their best efforts, hunger and food waste rage on.
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“If food waste were a country, it would be the third largest emitter of greenhouse gas emissions worldwide,” Lisa Moon said.
Moon heads the Chicago-based Global FoodBanking Network. The GFN connects to food banks in more than 50 countries.
It’s quite ironic that even though the world produces enough food to feed everyone well, about one-third of all the food made each year never reaches the plates of those in need due to significant logistical challenges, as highlighted by Moon.
That’s where local food banks step in.
In leveraging their highly advanced supply chains, some regions are able to contribute valuable knowledge to a global network that can adapt these practices to benefit communities worldwide, as stated by Moon.
In an effort to combat food waste, the Northern Illinois Food Bank plays a crucial role by supplying 250,000 meals daily to local residents. One of the methods it employs to minimize food wastage is through its retail recovery initiative, where surplus food is saved from being discarded and instead redirected to those who require it.
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Julie Yurko is the president and CEO of the Northern Illinois Food Bank
“We have 450 retail stores across our 13 counties in northern Illinois through which we are picking up food out of the back of their stores,” Yurko said. “We have 200 food banks helping us do that every day except for Sunday.”
The food banks are also making sure people are receiving healthy, nutritious food.
“We have specially trained volunteers. They’ve been doing it for years. They come in, and they’re going to sort through the food, and they’re going to rebox it and make sure that only the best food that is safe for consumption is going to go out to our network,” Yurko said.
And as all that food reaches people who need it most, food banks are hoping to break the cycle of hunger and waste.
“We care so deeply about people and serving and loving people, but we also love our planet, and it is one of our core tenets: How can we help nourish people while also saving our planet for generations to come?” Yurko said.
The Northern Illinois Food Bank said the food that does need to get tossed gets composted into natural fertilizer. Last year, more than 238,000 tons of food waste were composted.
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