Wednesday 16 March 2016

Italy changes law on food...







Italy changes law to make all supermarkets give unsold food to needy

'We are making it more convenient for companies to donate than to waste'
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Italy is set to pass a law that will make supermarkets donate their waste food to charities.
It will become the second European country to pass such laws after the French introduced a bill in February which bans supermarket throwing away or spoiling unsold food.
The bill has recieved widespread bipartisan support and is expected to pass the lower house of the parliament on Monday before a final vote in the Senate of the Republic.
Unlike France, which fines supermarkets found wasting food, Italy wants to give businesses incentives to donate food and help tackle the country's €12bn waste problem.
At the moment - any Italian bar, restaurant or supermarket looking to donate food must declare donations in advance.
The new law would instead offer reductions in rubbish taxes, which would vary depending on how much businesses give to charity, The Local reports.
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Proportion of food wasted at each stage of the supply chain in Europe and Russia, 2010
In addition, 17 articles in the bill look to amend food safety regulation allowing businesses to donate food after its 'best before' date is expired.
Italy's Agriculture Minister, Maurizio Martina, told La Repubblica: "We are making it more convenient for companies to donate than to waste.
"We currently recover 550 million tonnes of excess food each year but we want to arrive at one billion in 2016."
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French politician and anti-waste campaigner, Arash Derambarsh, alongside other volunteers donating unsold food to the homeless
The cause for cutting food waste has been gaining momentum across Europe.
The French politician Arash Derambarsh, who is trying to pass EU-wide legislation that will force supermarkets to give away waste food, has previously told The Independent: "The problem is simple – we have food going to waste and poor people who are going hungry".
Denmark recently launched its first food waste supermarket which sells unsold food donated by supermarkets and businesses at a cut price.
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COMMENTS

7 Comments
3 hours ago
Budbrooke
Goodness, imagine the outrage from Farage if the UK were to do this!
"Scandalous! How dare they feed our poor for free? They're our poor, keep them poor and hungry! There'd better be none going to any non British people, mind you."
3 hours ago
Elijah Scharnhorst
Has Farage said any such thing? Or are you just having a pop a straw man?

11 hours ago
Barba Rossa
lets hope Italy does not Follow France with Arrest or kill anyone wearing a 'Boycott Israel' T..but otherwise well done Italy may the English do likewise.  Osbourne will hate it as it keeps poor people alive.
14 hours ago
relate
Now the shops can donate the food to all the Italians left in Italy who are starving. 
1 day ago
english777
having spent more than my share of time in italy, the fact that a bill is "expected" to pass, doesn't mean it will, and, secondly, as per usual, italy gives INCENTIVES instead of FINING = gives money instead of collecting it. I can't wait to see the tricks shop owners -and especially big chain supermarket owners- will come up with to get the incentive AND throw the food.  :-/

10 hours ago
genevris
I'm Italian, even though I live in New Zealand at the moment, and yes, I couldn't agree more with you. That's exactly what's going to happen—simply because it always happens. 

3 hours ago
Doleo360
What do you mean with "gives money"? I don't think that's how incentives work.
You incentivate people making them pay less taxes AND reducing the complexity of the procedure. What happens is people will be able to donate and THEN monthly declare it to the State, whilst now they must declare every donation



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