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Apps to help you cut food waste and save cash

Mobile apps can help us make better, more informed food choices, from localising our shop to identifying a product鈥檚 sustainability credentials to reducing food waste. The food supply chain accounts for an estimated of greenhouse gas emissions, making diet a significant part of our carbon footprint. So how can apps make our diet more sustainable and save us money?

Apps that reduce your food waste

70 percent of Brits agree food waste is 鈥渂ad for the environment鈥, according to food campaigners WRAP. It costs the average household . Apps can help us reduce the amount of food we throw away.

Almost two-thirds of household food waste comes from items 鈥渘ot being used in time鈥, says the WRAP report. Keeping an inventory of food and use-by dates can help prevent waste, and shopping-list apps can make this easier. Some, including Nosh, load purchases on your phone by scanning supermarket receipts. With many apps, you can switch on notifications to receive reminders of when food is going 鈥榦ff鈥. Recipe recommendations for using food up are also offered by a number of apps, including Green Egg Shopper and Love Food Hate Waste. And you can track the cost of your food waste using apps such as Wise Up on Waste.

Apps that give away food

If you have food you don鈥檛 want or can鈥檛 eat before its use-by date, you can list it on a sharing app such as OLIO, and someone in your area will pick it up. OLIO co-founder, Tessa Clarke thought up the idea when she was moving abroad 鈥 she didn鈥檛 want to throw her food away but had no one to donate it to. Online baking coach Kate Lieberman uses OLIO to avoid wasting bakes she makes when teaching classes. Everything on the app is free, with the exception of the 鈥榤ade鈥 section, where you can buy local homemade foods.

Since 2015, OLIO has gained over 7 million users, some of whom have become 鈥淔ood Waste Hero鈥 volunteers, collecting food from businesses such as supermarkets and redistributing it to the OLIO community via the app. There is a charge for larger businesses using the Food Waste Heroes programme, which allows them to have zero edible food waste, but the service is free for individuals and small businesses using the basic version of the app.

Apps that offer discount restaurant meals

Restaurants, cafes and shops offer 鈥榤agic bags鈥 of unsold food at a discount price towards the end of the day on Too Good To Go. When you reserve a bag you have an idea of what it contains but don鈥檛 know the exact contents, though previous reviews can help you decide if it鈥檚 worth the money. You collect it from the business at the allotted time. Too Good To Go is free to use, as it takes a cut from the meals sold. You know exactly what you鈥檙e getting on the Karma app, but as a Swedish start-up the offerings aren鈥檛 as plentiful in the UK yet.

Apps that redistribute food to charities

Irish non-profit and registered charity, FoodCloud, connects food businesses with charities via an app. Breakfast clubs, hostels for the homeless, family support services and other charities receive notifications on the app from local food shops, telling them food is available for collection. FoodCloud also has 鈥榟ubs鈥 where surplace food from farms and manufacturers is stored for charities to collect or have delivered.

Apps that check a food鈥檚 ethical credentials

It鈥檚 possible to check the environmental credentials of some foods using an app. The Marine Conservation Society鈥檚 (MCS) Good Fish Guide app shows which fish are in season and how to identify responsibly sourced seafood, and offers information such as how different types of fish are commonly caught. It identifies logos that certify best practice, and suggests recipes. 鈥90 percent of world fish stocks are either fully or over-exploited from fishing鈥, they say.

Palm oil is the world鈥檚 most consumed oil, but its production can be problematic. Apps such as the Sustainable Palm Oil Shopping Guide and Palm Oil Scanner can help you find out if a food you鈥檙e buying contains sustainably sourced palm oil.

Some apps provide information on more than one food type. Not-for-profit app, Giki Social Enterprise, provides free data on branded and some own-label UK products by scanning barcodes. Products are awarded 鈥榖adges鈥 for sustainability, health and fairness. It can also recommend alternative products with a higher number of badges. The app covers 14 areas of interest,鈥痠ncluding carbon footprint, sustainable palm oil, responsible sourcing and better packaging, by partnering with charities such as the World Wildlife Fund, the Soil Association and RSPCA Assured. If the product you scan is not on the database, you can add it to their list to check.

The US-based HowGood app, an independent research organisation, rates food products on their environmental and social impact.

Apps that help you shop local

鈥淏uying local produce and meats can reduce your carbon footprint by 21 percent鈥, claims AWorld, the app supporting the United Nations鈥 campaign for individual action on climate change and sustainability . Sourcing foods grown locally is one of the sustainable habits it recommends adopting to lower your 鈥榝oodprint鈥.

Kids can get involved too

Game-style apps for kids promise a fun and informative way to get involved with sustainability. The Gro Garden app explores organic farming through interactions with environmental characters such as Connie the Compost. The Grow Recycling app shows what happens to household rubbish. Conservation and waste-sorting practices are taught in a virtual world set in south-eastern Africa in the Eco-Warriors app. And NAMOO Wonders Of Plant Life includes augmented reality to showcase the life of plants and food production.

There are more tips on reducing food waste and saving cash on 大象传媒 Food. Find out the impact of your diet using the 大象传媒 News climate change food calculator.