NPR

Opinion: How I Learned To Face Food Waste And Plan Smarter

According to the USDA, nearly 300 pounds of food per person gets thrown out in American homes each year. For three months, here's how one woman tried to cut back on food waste with her family of four.
Peter Rabbit encourages people not to waste food as he casually chomps on a carrot on posters around town.

In Washington, D.C., Peter Rabbit regularly challenges me to stop wasting food. On a billboard hovering beyond my local grocery store and on posters on bus stop shelters, he casually chomps on a carrot while leaning on big bold letters: "Better Ate Than Never."

Food waste estimates vary, but according to the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC), which runs this national "Save the Food" campaign with the nonprofit Ad Council, up to 40 percent of food in America is lost each year. Producing this food requires up to about one fifth of U.S. croplands, fertilizers and agricultural water. Once tossed, food becomes the number one contributor, by weight, to U.S. landfills where it releases methane, a greenhouse gas, while decaying.

Food is wasted across the supply chain — from farms to manufacturers to supermarkets to restaurants. But of food loss comes from our own homes. , nearly

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