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Placeline/People
City
Vaughan
Country
Canada
Montreal stores to stop dumping unsold food
The City of Montreal has plans to forbid grocery chains and other stores from throwing out edible food and useful clothing. The measures are aimed at cutting waste at its source and reducing the amount that ends up in landfills as part of the city's five-year plan to significantly reduce waste. Coun. Laurence Lavigne Lalonde says in the case of food, it doesn't make sense that perfectly consumable items end up in the trash when there are children and others going hungry. She says the city wants to work with food producers and grocery chains to either donate the food or at the very least, ensure it is composted. The city's objectives include diverting up to 75 per of residual waste away from landfills by 2025 and 85 per cent by 2030. According to a study on food waste, one-third of Canada's food waste could be recovered. Montreal will also move to ban clothing and textile companies from throwing out unsold clothes. The city instead is encouraging them to give unsold products to community organizations or introduce them into the circular economy so they can be reused.
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Information
Source name:
The Canadian Press
Unique identifier:
CP14497667
Legacy Identifier:
b77a37ac35e424628ac7c90cc306dafa1
Type:
Video
Duration:
1m30s
Dimensions:
1920px × 1080px 62.90 MB
Create Date:
10/17/2019 7:32:00 PM
Display aspect ratio:
16:9
Tags
Canada
clothing
compost
donate
donations
environment
food
hunger
hungry
landfills
Montreal
news
politics
waste
wibbitz