I just saw something rather sobering. You know those best before dates on a lot of packaged foods? They were originally designed to help stores rotate stock. They have nothing to do with food spoilage. Eventually a lot of that food to the tune of 78 million tons a year winds up in landfills because people won't buy or use it past the date. In a country where millions of people go hungry every day. Now food manufacturers are going to stop putting these dates on all but a few foods where spoilage is a health issue. Probably won't help feed any more people, but might add a few pennies to the bottom line of food retailers.
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from thefalcon@tech.lgbt
@thefalcon From now on, I guess we’ll just have to check items at the store carefully for signs of dust and decay.
=> More informations about this toot | More toots from SunnJax@tech.lgbt This content has been proxied by September (3851b).Proxy Information
text/gemini