粮食损失和浪费核算:菲律宾食品供应链的案例

IF 1.8 Q2 ECONOMICS
Anieluz Pastolero, M. Sassi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

近年来,研究人员和决策者对粮食损失和浪费的兴趣日益浓厚。对这一问题的关注主要集中在工业化国家,在发展中国家内部造成了知识差距,菲律宾就是其中之一。这种信息的缺乏阻碍了国家一级解决这一问题的反应,这一问题的影响延伸到粮食和营养安全、生产力和资源利用。因此,我们的论文估计了菲律宾粮食供应链中大米、玉米和香蕉商品的粮食损失和浪费水平。我们首先确定了食品供应链中每个阶段食物损失和浪费的累积百分比,并将这些部分转化为最初供人类食用的可食用食物量。我们的研究结果显示,在各自的食品供应链中,有七分之一到五分之一的可食用大米、玉米和香蕉被损失或浪费。对于所分析的每一种商品,造成这一问题的主要活动分别是干燥、脱毛和收获。我们的研究结果为政策干预和研究提供了以下建议:建立一个公认的粮食损失和浪费定义;在食品供应链层面调整干预措施;遵循供应链系统方法来减少问题;确定可接受的损失/浪费水平。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Food loss and waste accounting: the case of the Philippine food supply chain
In recent years, the interest in food loss and waste has been gaining momentum from researchers and policy-makers. Much of the attention on the matter is centered in industrialized countries, creating a knowledge gap within developing countries, among which is the Philippines. This lack of information impedes the country-level response in solving the issue, whose implications extend to food and nutrition security, productivity, and resource use. For this reason, our paper estimates the food loss and waste levels in the Philippine food supply chain of rice, corn, and banana commodities. We were first to identify the percentage accumulation of food loss and waste in each stage of the food supply chain and translated such portions into edible food volumes initially intended for human consumption. Our findings revealed that between one-seventh to one-fifth of edible rice, corn, and banana quantities are lost/wasted in their respective food supply chains. For each of the commodities analyzed, the principal activities responsible for the problem are drying, dehanding, and harvesting, respectively. Our results suggest the following for policy intervention and research: establish an agreed-upon food loss and waste definition; calibrate interventions at the level of the food supply chain; follow a supply chain system approach in reducing the problem; and determine an acceptable level of loss/waste.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
14.30%
发文量
10
审稿时长
8 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal Bio-based and Applied Economics (BAE) provides a forum for presentation and discussion of applied research in the field of bio-based sectors and related policies, informing evidence-based decision-making and policy-making. It intends to provide a scholarly source of theoretical and applied studies while remaining widely accessible for non-researchers. BAE seeks applied contributions on the economics of bio-based industries, such as agriculture, forestry, fishery and food, dealing with any related disciplines, such as resource and environmental economics, consumer studies, regional economics, innovation and development economics. Beside well-established fields of research related to these sectors, BAE aims in particular to explore cross-sectoral, recent and emerging themes characterizing the integrated management of biological resources, bio-based industries and sustainable development of rural areas. A special attention is also paid to the linkages between local and international dimensions.
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