Skip to Content

Food Waste vs. Climate Change: Egypt’s Untapped Solution to Hunger

February 9, 2025 by
Food Waste vs. Climate Change: Egypt’s Untapped Solution to Hunger
Mohamed Elsamahy
| No comments yet

Egypt discards 30% of its annual food production—enough to feed 15 million people—while nearly 30% of its population faces food insecurity. This paradox isn’t just a humanitarian crisis; it’s a climate disaster. Rotting food emits methane, a greenhouse gas 25 times more potent than CO2, making food waste reduction a critical yet overlooked solution to Egypt’s dual challenges of hunger and climate change.

The Scale of Egypt’s Food Waste Crisis

  • 18 million tons of food are wasted annually, costing $4.3 billion (FAO, 2022).
  • Top Wasted Foods:
    • 35%: Fruits and vegetables (spoilage during transport/storage).
    • 25%: Bread (cultural overproduction and poor distribution).
    • 20%: Dairy and meat (lack of refrigeration in rural areas).
  • Climate Impact: Food waste generates 8% of Egypt’s methane emissions (UNEP, 2021).

Innovative Solutions in Action

  • Food Bank Egypt:
    • Uses AI-powered logistics to track surplus food from hotels and supermarkets.
    • Redistributed 12 million meals in 2022 (Food Bank Egypt, 2023).
  • Waste-to-Energy Projects:

Policy Gaps and Grassroots Success

  • Lack of Legislation: Egypt has no national law against food waste, unlike France’s 2016 ban.
  • Cairo’s Zero Food Waste Pilot: Reduced municipal waste by 15% through composting incentives.

Expert Quote:

“Food waste is a moral and environmental failure. We have the tools to fix it—now we need political will.”

— Moez El Shohdi, CEO, Food Bank Egypt

Sign in to leave a comment