Turn food waste into food wins

The average Irish household wastes €700-worth of perfectly good food every year. When the weekly shop already feels expensive enough, it doesn't make sense to throw money in the bin. The government aims to reduce food waste by 50% by the end of the decade. Here's how to keep more food on your plate, and more money in your pocket.

Why your wallet will thank you

A lot of the food we throw out isn't mouldy leftovers – it's fresh bread, unused vegetables or meals that never made it to the table. The reasons are different for everyone: we buy too much, plans change, leftovers go off in the fridge, etc. Families that plan their meals, or check their fridge before hitting the shops, can cut back on this waste significantly.

The environmental reality

Irish households generate 220,000 tonnes of food waste yearly. This isn't just wasted food; it’s everything that went into producing the wasted food: water, energy, transport, packaging etc. When food rots in landfill, it produces methane – a greenhouse gas 28-times more potent than CO2.

If every household in Ireland cut their food waste by 50%…

  • Every home would save €350 a year

  • We'd prevent the equivalent of 200 baguettes from every home going to waste which, if stacked end to end, would reach almost three-times the height of Croke Park

  • We'd collectively cut emissions equivalent to taking approximately 185,000 cars off Irish roads for a year

Understanding food labels

  • Use By = Safety First

    These dates matter for food safety: think meat, fish, ready-made salads, etc. After the ‘use-by’ date, these foods are unsafe – unless they were frozen when still in date.

  • Best Before = Quality Check

    Typically, a ‘best before’ date is used for food products such as canned, dried or frozen foods. Many foods that are past their ‘best before’ date may be safe to eat, but their quality may have deteriorated.

  • Freezer Extension

    Many foods can be frozen before (never after) their use-by date, extending their life by months. Too much bread? Slice and freeze. Meat approaching its use-by date? Freeze in portions. Your freezer is your best food waste prevention tool.

  • Storage Instructions Matter

    Those ‘keep refrigerated’ or ‘store in a cool, dry place’ instructions are essential for dates to be accurate, and to maintain food quality.

Three simple steps that cut waste

Irish households bin €60 worth of food every month - that's €700 annually that could stay in your pocket