Current:Home > MarketsWant to fight climate change and food waste? One app can do both -TruePath Finance
Want to fight climate change and food waste? One app can do both
View
Date:2025-04-15 01:33:57
More than a third of food grown in the U.S. goes uneaten, and that percentage has increased in the past five years. Much of that food ends up in landfills, where it decomposes, creating a potent gas that contributes to global warming.
A company based in Denmark has spent the past eight years working to bring that percentage down by helping restaurants sell food cheaply.
Too Good To Go works with businesses to sell their end-of-day leftovers for 60%-80% off. By matching hungry, cost-conscious customers with surplus food, the app's creators say they minimize waste, one bag of saved food at a time.
"I think it's doing that on a micro scale and having a macro impact," says Chris MacAulay, the app's U.S. country manager.
The app started in Denmark in 2015. Today there are participating stores in 17 countries and more than a dozen U.S. cities including New York, Phoenix and Seattle. Several cities including Santa Barbara, Minneapolis and Atlanta just started participating this year. The company claims Los Angeles is its most successful city yet. Next, it's headed to cities in the southeast.
MacAulay says the cheaper price tag and the recouped business costs are great side effects, but that's not the main point. "The kernel of the why is really around reducing food waste," he says. "Because it's such a large contributor to CO2e."
CO2e stands for the carbon dioxide equivalent of a product's total planet-warming gas emissions.
When someone buys a "surprise bag," the app adds that purchase to the consumer's lifetime climate impact tally. It displays all the electricity and the carbon emissions prevented from going to waste.
"We've saved over 250 million meals," MacAulay says. "That's one meal every three seconds. So if you think about the scale, it is having an impact."
Rotten food in landfills makes a potent planet-warming gas called methane. The climate impact also includes the land and water used to grow that food and the gas used to power the trucks and factories that prepare and transport food.
According to the app's estimate, that translates to taking about 135,000 cars off the road for a year.
"That's a huge amount, especially considering that in the U.S. all food loss and waste accounts for about 6% of our total greenhouse gas emissions footprint," says Alexandria Coari with the food waste nonprofit ReFED, where she's the vice president of capital, innovation and engagement.
Coari says companies like Too Good To Go have the potential to reduce the equivalent carbon emissions of 870,000 cars in a year. "Marked-down alert apps like that of Too Good To Go are one of the top 10 solutions to fighting food loss and waste as well as climate change," she says.
These apps are especially popular among businesses that produce baked goods, since they can't sell stale food the next day. So there's no shortage of pastries, doughnuts, pizzas and bagels available.
"I think in the areas where they've tried to expand into retail grocery, even into manufacturing, there's still a little bit to be figured out there," Coari says.
Grocery stores increasingly have programs to divert food waste, by repurposing unsold produce into pre-made meals, providing in-store clearance sections and partnering with local food banks.
MacAulay says there is an especially high demand for bags from the grocery partners the app has.
"That's one of our responsibilities is to continue to broaden the selection on the app," says MacAulay. "We know that there are really popular surprise bags out there. And we want to make sure that people have a chance to get them."
veryGood! (27)
Related
- Nevada attorney general revives 2020 fake electors case
- Tiger Woods' partnership with Nike is over. Here are 5 iconic ads we'll never forget
- 'Poor Things' director praises Bruce Springsteen during Golden Globes acceptance speech: Watch
- 'The Mandalorian' is coming to theaters: What we know about new 'Star Wars' movie
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Eclectic Grandpa Is the New Aesthetic & We Are Here for the Cozy Quirkiness
- Virginia police identify suspect in 3 cold-case homicides from the 1980s, including victims of the Colonial Parkway Murders
- GE business to fill order for turbines to power Western Hemisphere’s largest wind project
- What to watch: O Jolie night
- 'The impacts are real': New satellite images show East Coast sinking faster than we thought
Ranking
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Michigan wins College Football Playoff National Championship, downing Huskies 34-13
- Tiger Woods and Nike have ended their partnership after 27 years
- Sinéad O'Connor died of natural causes, coroner says
- The city of Chicago is ordered to pay nearly $80M for a police chase that killed a 10
- $1 million Powerball tickets sold in Texas and Kentucky are about to expire
- Hezbollah fires rockets at Israel in response to killing of top Hamas leader
- Sinéad O'Connor died of natural causes, coroner says
Recommendation
Selena Gomez's "Weird Uncles" Steve Martin and Martin Short React to Her Engagement
Wisconsin lumber company fined nearly $300,000 for dangerous conditions after employee death
Robert Downey Jr. announces on Golden Globes stage: 'I took a beta-blocker.' What do they do?
Tina Fey consulted her kids on new 'Mean Girls': 'Don't let those millennials overthink it!'
Backstage at New York's Jingle Ball with Jimmy Fallon, 'Queer Eye' and Meghan Trainor
1000-Lb. Sisters' Tammy Slaton Fires Back at Haters Criticizing Her Appearance
Bonuses for college football coaches soar to new heights; Harbaugh sets record with haul
Christian Oliver's Ex-Wife Says She “Deeply” Feels Love From Actor and Their Kids After Fatal Plane Crash