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Of the first five US states with food waste bans, Massachusetts alone has reduced landfill waste

Fiorentia Zoi Anglou, Robert Evan Sanders, Ioannis Stamatopoulos

2024Science13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Diverting food waste from landfills is crucial to reduce emissions and meet Paris Agreement targets. Between 2014 and 2024, nine US states banned commercial waste generators-such as grocery chains-from landfilling food waste, expecting a 10 to 15% waste reduction. However, no evaluation of these bans exists. We compile a comprehensive waste dataset covering 36 US states between 1996 and 2019 to evaluate the first five implemented state-level bans. Contrary to policy-makers' expectations, we can reject aggregate waste reductions higher than 3.2%, and we cannot reject a zero-null aggregate effect. Moreover, we cannot reject a zero-null effect for any other state except Massachusetts, which gradually achieved a 13.2% reduction. Our findings reveal the need to reassess food waste bans using Massachusetts as a benchmark for success.

Topics & Concepts

Food wasteBenchmark (surveying)Waste managementZero wasteAggregate (composite)Mixed wasteEnvironmental scienceState (computer science)Baseline (sea)BusinessAgricultural economicsEngineeringRadioactive wasteEconomicsComputer sciencePolitical scienceGeographyLawGeodesyComposite materialMaterials scienceAlgorithmMunicipal Solid Waste ManagementFood Waste Reduction and SustainabilityEnvironmental Justice and Health Disparities
Of the first five US states with food waste bans, Massachusetts alone has reduced landfill waste | Litcius