Measurement of Post-flight Food Waste: A Case Study of the South African Airways

Abstract

The United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development promulgated 17 Sustainable Development Goals in September 2015. The overarching aim of these goals was to promote a socio-economically and environmentally sound development agenda across all countries worldwide in order to curb global social, economic and environmental issues that manifest themselves in widespread poverty, starvation, ill-health, inequality, inequitable resource distribution, pollution, climate change and many other indicators. This study was aimed at determining the contribution that the airline catering industry could make towards attainments of some of the 169 2030 targets of the UN particularly those that speak to starvation, food waste and environmental despoliation. The methodology was quantitative using data collection sheets in order to quantify the amount of food that returned from all economy class over a period of 4 days at the Johannesburg kitchen of Air Chefs South Africa. The design was cross-sectional case study as data was collected at a specific point in time using one airline. The study discovered that there were a lot of different categories of food that returned untouched but regarded as spoilt and unfit for human consumption and not donated to charity organisations for fear of liability in cases of food poisoning.

Presenters

Dumsile Hlengwa

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

Changing Dimensions of Contemporary Tourism

KEYWORDS

Sustainable, Development, Airline, Waste, Catering

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