The wise strategy has to be taken with multi layered technology solutions for the food and agricultural waste management in long term basis. Japanese latest food and agricultural waste technology and equipments are available but need to be transfer to the poor and developing countries at lowest cost. Similarly many developed countries must come forward to share their know how to the developing countries at minimum or without any cost for the best management of food and agricultural waste. It is time to think, act seriously without the border of the country because we have only and only one Blue Sky and Blue Earth, must keep continue blue and clear for the next coming generations, years, decades and centuries ahead.
Food and agricultural waste management is undertaken to recycling the wastes so as to reduce the ill effects of wastes on environment, health and aesthetics. The waste may be either in solid, liquid or gaseous form. The process of food and agricultural waste management varies for rural and urban areas, for municipal and industrial waste, for developed and developing nations. The management of municipal wastes is responsibility of local government while as the management of agricultural waste is the responsibility of farmers. The developed nations use various novel technologies to reduce the negative impacts of waste or use and effective management to exploit it.
Presently, reducing food and agricultural waste has become the main agenda of many governments, NGOs, and other societies in many countries. Food and agricultural waste is nothing but remnants of our used stuff as vegetables, food stuff, animal waste etc. which people are practicing and reusing them daily by repurposing for their utility since ancient times. Due to modern urbanization and industrialization, the concept of repurposing has changed by new waste management and recycling technology invention, together with use and throw concept.
Presently, world population are increasing day by day which creating a huge amount of food and agricultural waste which ends up in landfills, also can be re-purposed. The United Kingdom was the first country to introduce the law for food and agricultural waste management in due to health and hygienic issues in the civil society and cities areas. After this, the concept of dust-bin has became essential part of our life.
Today world is paying more attention to the issue of food and agricultural waste management is calling for more decisive action to be address on it. The growing awareness and increase in demand for proper action are rooted in strong moral connotations associated with food and agricultural waste management. These are based on the fact that food and agricultural waste implies unnecessary pressure on environment and natural resources. The land and water resources have been wasted, pollution created and greenhouse gases emitted to no purpose. It is also wonder how we ignore and allow food and agricultural waste thrown away when many hundred millions people in the world continue to hungry every day. This global attention on the issue of food and agricultural waste management is the main Agenda for Sustainable Development of st Century. Many countries are already taking action to reduce food and agricultural waste, but the challenges ahead remain significant and we need to step up efforts. When we strive to make progress towards reducing food and agricultural waste, it can highly effective in our efforts of best management of food cost, environmental problems and greenhouse gases. There is need to be considered main three dimensions. At first we need to know how much food and agricultural crops are wasted as accurately as possible, where and why Secondly we need to more clear about underlying reasons or objectives for reducing food and agricultural waste, must be related to food security and environment. Thirdly, we need to understand how food and agricultural waste, and its measures to reduce it, affect the objectives being pursued. These are the main points in order to help design more informed and better management policies for food and agricultural waste management. An estimation by FAO in suggested that around a third of the world’s food was lost and wasted every year. According to UN environment, globally around fourteen percent of the world’s food is lost from production before reaching to the retail level. The main objectives are reducing food and agricultural waste by better management and know how essentially environmental situation changes are. In the case of greenhouse gas these accumulate throughout the supply chain. Therefore, reducing food and agricultural waste by consumers will have the biggest impact which represents a larger amount of green gas house emissions.