Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

New Program Aims To Have Quebec Food Banks Get Unsold Surplus Grocery Store Food

The Canadian Press, 15 Mar, 2017 11:44 AM
    MONTREAL — Quebec food banks and some of the province's grocery stores are teaming up to ensure that perfectly edible food will end up in the hands of those who need it most and not at local landfills.
     
    The supermarket recovery program is being dubbed the first of its kind in Canada and follows a pilot project launched a few years ago in Montreal and Quebec City which yielded promising results.
     
    "It means a better quality of food (at food banks) and a consistent supply," said Annie Gauvin, executive director of Food Banks of Quebec, which deals with the 30 wholesale food banks across the province.
     
    The program would see those regional banks picking up items and distributing them to local organizations.
     
    A pilot project that involved 177 supermarkets was able to recover 2.5 million kilograms of food, including 500,000 kilograms of meat.
     
    "People give a lot during the holidays, during food drives and at different times of the year," said Gauvin. "But there are times of the year, when the shelves are empty, when it's harder to distribute, but the supermarket program will mean weekly deliveries to regional food banks, all year long."
     
    In the next year, 175 more stores will be added to the initial 177, with the ultimate goal of having 611 stores participating in three years — a number that represents nearly two-thirds of Quebec grocery stores.
     
    The ultimate goal is to recoup up to eight million kilograms of food each year, reduce food waste and help the environment by saving the equivalent of 7,000 tonnes of greenhouse gases yearly. The province says that is the equivalent of taking about 1,500 cars off the road.
     
    Three major grocery chains — Loblaws, Sobeys and Metro — are taking part.
     
    Quebec has kicked in a one-time grant of just under $400,000, which will help regional food banks offset logistical costs like freezers and transportation.
     
    The national organization of food banks says a one-size-fits-all scenario is unlikely to work all across the country, partly because of available infrastructure and partly because of geography.
     
    While Quebec has centralized food banks, other provinces have smaller organizations that go directly to the retailer to pick up surplus food.
     
    "Every province is structured a little bit differently," said Marzena Gersho, Food Banks Canada's communications director. "It's dependent on the province, it's dependent on how they want to structure picking it up but certainly there have been long-term relationships between grocery stores and local food banks for a number of years."
     
    As food banks grapple with increased demand, the chief executive officer of the Welcome Hall Mission, a large retail food bank in Quebec, said the provincial project offers some relief.
     
    "It takes political will for a group of people with diverse interests but who all have a heart for doing the right thing," said Sam Watts. "It's allowing us to recuperate huge quantities of food that would otherwise be lost and thrown away, and put into dumps and create greenhouse gases."
     
    He says the food waste at his own operation is less than one per cent.
     
    "The fascinating thing is that there is actually enough food to feed everybody and there's enough surplus food to feed every Canadian, every Quebecer, every Montrealer," said Watts. "The only problem is distribution and management."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Dangerous Conditions Prevent Resumption Of Search For Missing B.C. Snowshoers

    Dangerous Conditions Prevent Resumption Of Search For Missing B.C. Snowshoers
    The search was suspended Wednesday without any sign of 43-year-old Roy Lee and 64-year-old Chun Lam.

    Dangerous Conditions Prevent Resumption Of Search For Missing B.C. Snowshoers

    B.C. Court Rules Against Allowing Man's Trial To Be Held In French

    B.C. Court Rules Against Allowing Man's Trial To Be Held In French
    A judge in British Columbia has ruled against a man's bid to have his trial heard in French.

    B.C. Court Rules Against Allowing Man's Trial To Be Held In French

    Wildlife Centre Says Dozens Of Eagles Electrocuted By Power-Pole Perch

    Wildlife Centre Says Dozens Of Eagles Electrocuted By Power-Pole Perch
    Dozens of bald eagles that have flocked to British Columbia's Lower Mainland this year have been killed after they perched on power poles instead of trees.

    Wildlife Centre Says Dozens Of Eagles Electrocuted By Power-Pole Perch

    Police Arrest Ottawa Man Who Allegedly Fled To Avoid Testifying At Murder Trial

    Police say Ali Abdul Hussein was arrested on Tuesday after arriving in Ottawa from a foreign country.

    Police Arrest Ottawa Man Who Allegedly Fled To Avoid Testifying At Murder Trial

    Family Calls For Road-safety Changes After Cyclist Dies In N.B. Training Crash

    Family Calls For Road-safety Changes After Cyclist Dies In N.B. Training Crash
    The death of competitive cyclist Ellen Watters highlights the need for safer roads in New Brunswick and beyond, her friend said Thursday ahead of a rally planned in her honour.

    Family Calls For Road-safety Changes After Cyclist Dies In N.B. Training Crash

    Whale Washes Up On N.S. Beach Near Area Where Other Species Found Dead

    Whale Washes Up On N.S. Beach Near Area Where Other Species Found Dead
    DIGBY, N.S. — A dead whale has washed up in the same area of western Nova Scotia that has seen scores of dead herring, starfish, clams and lobster litter the shoreline — but fisheries officials say it's too early to say whether the deaths are related.

    Whale Washes Up On N.S. Beach Near Area Where Other Species Found Dead