Back

Discover CALS

See how our current work and research is bringing new thinking and new solutions to some of today's biggest challenges.

Share

Cornell’s Polson Institute for Global Development will host “Reducing Campus Food Waste: Innovations and Ideas,” a lecture and workshop May 2-3 at Call Auditorium, Kennedy Hall, and in the Multipurpose Room of the Africana Studies and Research Center, 310 Triphammer Road.

The lecture and workshop are free and open to the public.

“This two-day event brings together community members, academics and policy makers to engage with the Cornell and Ithaca community on reducing food waste – an important, but often overlooked, sustainability issue,” said Lori Leonard, professor of development sociology, director of the Polson Institute and a fellow at the Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future.

The event kicks off with noted author and activist Tristram Stuart speaking on “Food Waste and What We Can Do About It,” May 2 at 5:30 p.m. in Call Auditorium. Stuart founded Feedback, an environmental group that aims to change society’s attitude toward wasting food. He is also the founder of Toast Ale – a beer made from fresh surplus bread – which launched in the United Kingdom three years ago.

Following Stuart, award-winning celebrity chef Gabe Kennedy ’13 will host a catered reception at Call Auditorium. As a chef, world traveler and environmental advocate, Kennedy is dedicated to connecting people, food and culture.

In the United States, about 30 to 40 percent of the food supply becomes waste, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service. This estimate includes annual food loss at the retail and consumer household levels – an estimated 133 billion pounds, worth approximately $161 billion.

The USDA has said food waste has far-reaching impacts on domestic and global food security, resource conservation and climate change.

On May 3 at the Africana Center, the morning workshop session, “Feeding Hungry (and Thirsty) People: New Ideas” will feature: Ciara Low of Uproot Colorado; Dan Kuzrock of ReGrained; Rachel Landis of The Good Food Collective; Ben Chesler of Imperfect Produce; Sam Alcaine, assistant professor of food science; and Dominique McMillan of Food Recovery Network.

Over lunch, participants will discuss food rescue and redistribution through local networks. Included in the discussion will be: Meaghan Sheehan Rosen of Friendship Donation Network; Mark Darling, retired sustainability programs director in the Office of Energy Management and Sustainability at Ithaca College; and Shakima Clency, Cornell associate dean of students for student empowerment. Clency will discuss Cornell’s “Swipe Out Hunger” initiative.

The afternoon will feature workshops on “Feeding Food Scraps to Animals” with Tara Pike of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, and Tom Il Grande of Northstar Recycle; “Innovating for Source Reduction” with Hannah Semler of Whole Crops and Brian Lipinski of World Resources Institute; and “Transforming Ideas into Action” with  Ellen Meyer of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

Funding for this event was provided by the Atkinson Center, the Cornell Lectures Committee, Engaged Cornell and the Polson Institute.

Keep Exploring

Several red 'Crimson Beauty" raspberries hang from green leaves and stems.

Report

Relevance Raspberry and strawberry production in the United States is concentrated in California and Florida, where climate variability and rising costs challenge long-term sustainability. Demand for locally grown fruit is increasing, creating...
  • Cornell Cooperative Extension
Charles Midega (left) and Roy Odawa display the Kontiki kiln they modified to make biochar from human feces. Credit: Rebecca Nelson

News

Cornell researchers and Kenyan partners have developed a fertilizer made from human excreta. The product improves soil health and food production, while preventing pollution in informal settlements and the aquatic environment.

  • Ashley School of Global Development and the Environment
  • Global Development Section
  • Agriculture