Market Snapshot
  • U.S.
  • Europe
  • Asia
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
DJIA 15,354.40 +121.18 0.80%
S&P 500 1,667.47 +17.00 1.03%
Nasdaq 3,498.97 +33.72 0.97%
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
STOXX 50 2,817.99 +11.29 0.40%
FTSE 100 6,723.06 +35.26 0.53%
DAX 8,398.00 +28.13 0.34%
Ticker Volume Price Price Delta
Nikkei 15,138.10 +100.88 0.67%
Hang Seng 23,082.70 +38.44 0.17%
S&P/ASX 200 5,180.77 +15.11 0.29%

Germany Seeks to Cut Consumer Food Waste in Expiry-Date Debate

Germany plans to reduce food waste by raising awareness among consumers that best-by dates are guidelines, as opposed to deadlines for when it’s safe to eat products, the Agriculture and Consumer Protection Ministry said.

The ministry has started a campaign to inform retailers about expiration dates and will distribute 4 million leaflets and information cards in 21,000 German supermarkets, it said in a statement on its website today.

Every German citizen, on average, discards 82 kilograms (181 pounds) of food a year at home, equivalent to two packed shopping carts, according to the ministry.

“The best-by date is not a throw-away date, but a guide,” Agriculture Minister Ilse Aigner was cited as saying in the statement. “In general, a product is still perfectly edible for several days even after the best-by date.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Rudy Ruitenberg in Paris at rruitenberg@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Claudia Carpenter at ccarpenter2@bloomberg.net

Bloomberg moderates all comments. Comments that are abusive or off-topic will not be posted to the site. Excessively long comments may be moderated as well. Bloomberg cannot facilitate requests to remove comments or explain individual moderation decisions.

Sponsored Link