Reducing Wasted Food

Pacific Coast Food Waste Commitment

Help Us Cut Food Waste in Half By 2030

The Pacific Coast Collaborative is calling on food businesses and jurisdictions to join the Pacific Coast Food Waste Commitment (PCFWC), an unprecedented public-private partnership featuring some of the nation’s largest food businesses alongside local, state, and provincial governments – all working collaboratively toward a shared ambition of effective, industry-wide actions that prevent and reduce wasted food along the West Coast.

The PCFWC is a voluntary agreement that builds upon existing food waste reduction platforms and commitments – including United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goal 12.3 and Champions 2030 – and provides a critical opportunity for the Pacific Coast region to lead the country in addressing the environmental, food security, and climate change crisis of food waste.

Pacific Coast Food Waste Commitment project map

Our Progress

Since 2019, the PCFWC has been collecting retail data for more than 50% of the regional grocery market share. In the most recent analysis, the data indicates that since 2019, unsold food rates among retailers have decreased by 28%, leading to a 30% decrease in the estimated carbon footprint of unsold food in the region. To highlight the significance of these results, the PCFWC has published two separate reports.

In the Year-End Report, readers will find a summary of these data findings as well as summaries of progress made in PCFWC recruitment, intervention projects, and media coverage. In the Data Report, readers will find a comprehensive analysis of retail data for the most recent year as well as an analysis of year-over-year data.

Download each report to learn more about the impact that the PCFWC has on the region and what the future holds for continued progress in food waste reduction.

Case Studies

Resources

Produce Donation Training

Grocery stores, manufacturers, and food donation partners face particular challenges when it comes to donating and receiving highly perishable produce. The Center for EcoTechnology partnered with the PCFWC to create this succinct training on produce donations for teams working in the food industry. It presents the case for why donating surplus food is important and best practices for ensuring quality, safe food gets to donation partners. The training was informed by a survey that collected feedback from approximately 30 food rescue organizations on the challenges they face when receiving donated produce.

Food Waste Reduction Training

Individuals and business teams can be empowered to fight food waste at every node of the supply chain! Together with Triple Win Advisory and Bob’s Red Mill Manufacturing, the PCFWC created this food waste education and training video. It covers why food waste is a concern, where it occurs along the food supply chain, and what companies and individuals can do about it. Filled with infographics and engaging visuals, the intended audience is for staff members in retail, manufacturing, and restaurants, and for individuals wanting to understand steps they can take to reduce food waste in their home. 

Boy helping package food donations

Food Recovery and Donation Guide

Sodexo USA and the Sodexo Stop Hunger Foundation are committed to ending hunger and reducing carbon emissions and sharing best practices on food recovery. With that in mind, they’ve created the Food Recovery and Donation Guide to help businesses and organization repurpose their unused food. Their guide is designed to help foodservice operators overcome obstacles and build successful food recovery programs.

Learn More

To learn how your business or jurisdiction can be a part of this important effort, fill out the form below or contact Tara McNerney at tara.mcnerney@wwfus.org

To learn more about our upcoming food waste intervention projects and open RFPs, please click here.

Food Business Signatories

Retailers

Aldi logo
Raley's
Walmart

Manufacturers

Bobs Red Mill
Food Northwest
Lamb Weston

Foodservice Companies

Aramark
Compass Group
Food Northwest

Growers

Del Monte

Distributors

Organically Grown

Jurisdiction Partners

California

Los Angeles
Oakland
San Francisco
Alameda County

Oregon

Portland

Washington State

Seattle
King County

British Columbia, Canada

Vancouver

Resource Partners

ReFED

Funders

The Pacific Coast Food Waste Commitment could not accomplish our work without the generous support of our funders.

Cal Recycle logo

Funded by a Grant from the Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) through California Climate Investments.

We are also deeply grateful for the ongoing critical support provided by many of the PCFWC’s jurisdiction members.

Why Food Waste?

In the United States, 35% of food goes unsold or uneaten. It’s an enormous waste of environmental resources, including freshwater and cropland, and is responsible for more than one-fifth of all landfill volume. It’s also a major factor impacting the climate – in fact, the 2020 Drawdown Review from Project Drawdown ranks “reduced food waste” as one of its top solutions to decrease global greenhouse gas emissions. Food waste also affects the economy – new estimates put the cost of food waste in the Pacific Coast region alone at more than $65 billion, which is shouldered by businesses and consumers alike. And in 2020, COVID-19 brought the issue of food waste to national attention, as pandemic-related disruptions and bottlenecks caused spikes in the amount of loss and waste throughout the supply chain, all while tens of millions of people wondered where their next meal would come from.

How Can Your Business Reduce and Prevent Food Loss and Waste

  1. Commit: Sign on to the PCFWC to reduce and prevent wasted food by 50% by 2030 and work towards implementing existing commitments made under UN Sustainable Development Goal 12.3 and Champions 2030 as a region.
  2. Measure: Establish a streamlined methodology for measurement with the support of the PCFWC technical team and contribute to anonymized reporting through your own individual online dashboard – measurement makes management easier, and data gathered from your business and others will help identify areas to target.
  3. Act: Drive systemic change through pre-competitive industry collaboration to find solutions to shared barriers to reducing food waste. Contribute to demonstration projects, share and develop industry-wide best practices, and receive technical assistance related to policy, financing, business solutions, and education.

What Does Joining the PCFWC Mean for Your Business?

  • The PCFWC is a voluntary agreement for food businesses to publicly commit to private sector action to reduce food waste by 50% by 2030.
  • All PCFWC signatories establish a baseline year for wasted food within their operations and report against it annually.
  • Signatories can participate in pre-competitive and collaborative working groups to discuss key waste hotspots within the value chain (on topics such as food rescue and minimizing produce and dairy waste).
  • All signatories will receive support via facilitated convenings and hands-on engagement designed to help them reach their commitments, meet annual reporting goals, and implement meaningful actions that reduce wasted food.
  • There’s no cost for year one – a cost-effective annual fee will be introduced in subsequent years.

How Does the PCFWC Benefit Your Business?

  • Proven ROI: Food waste reduction programs have shown proven return on investment for all food-sector businesses.
  • Analysis at Scale: Individual anonymous reporting will help your business measure progress, identify priority areas of action, and develop broader industry benchmarking.
  • Actionable Insights: By collaborating through pre-competitive working groups, your business will gain best practices and insights into key waste hotspots to help achieve results faster—all while helping to build a regional roadmap for additional businesses to join the effort to reduce wasted food.
  • Leadership and Community Building: Demonstrate your leadership on climate and hunger issues while engaging your community through increased and more streamlined food rescue and donation activities.

A Collaboration Model That Works

The PCFWC is based on a successful industry-supported voluntary agreement in the United Kingdom called the “Courtauld Commitment.” This effort resulted in:

  • Overall delivery of a 19% reduction in UK food waste.
  • More than £100 million in business savings from reducing food waste.
  • A 14:1 return on investment for every dollar spent on food waste reduction.
  • A 50% increase in food redistribution to those struggling with food insecurity.
  • A reduction of 555,000 metric tons of CO2e emissions in the food and supply chain.

Join Us to Reduce Wasted Food by 50% by 2030

Fill out the form below to take the first step toward reducing wasted food on the West Coast.

Think Global. Act Local.