Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka

Food waste is a growing concern in Sri Lanka’s urban areas, with local authorities struggling to manage rising volumes from households, markets, restaurants, and institutions. A multi-city assessment across 10 municipalities revealed that despite various actors being involved government agencies, pr...

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Autores principales: Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M., Jayathilake, Nilanthi, Bandara, A., Bucatariu, C., Reitemeier, M., Drechsel, Pay
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117305
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author Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M.
Jayathilake, Nilanthi
Bandara, A.
Bucatariu, C.
Reitemeier, M.
Drechsel, Pay
author_browse Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M.
Bandara, A.
Bucatariu, C.
Drechsel, Pay
Jayathilake, Nilanthi
Reitemeier, M.
author_facet Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M.
Jayathilake, Nilanthi
Bandara, A.
Bucatariu, C.
Reitemeier, M.
Drechsel, Pay
author_sort Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Food waste is a growing concern in Sri Lanka’s urban areas, with local authorities struggling to manage rising volumes from households, markets, restaurants, and institutions. A multi-city assessment across 10 municipalities revealed that despite various actors being involved government agencies, private waste collectors, NGOs coordination remains weak due to fragmented mandates and poor enforcement. Municipalities like Colombo and Kaduwela generate particularly high levels of food waste, especially from public markets. Some cities, including Negombo and Kaduwela, redirect waste to pig farms informally, but most lack structured redistribution systems or legal backing for food recovery. Composting and private-sector collection services exist but are limited by operational challenges. National ministries oversee food production, safety, and waste separately, creating overlap and gaps in implementation at the local level. Civil society initiatives, including food donation and awareness programs, are emerging, but remain small-scale. Without a unified framework, food waste prevention efforts remain piecemeal. The analysis calls for clearer institutional roles, cross-sector collaboration, and the formalization of redistribution channels. Strengthening governance and stakeholder alignment is essential to reducing food loss and achieving circular economy and SDG 12.3 targets in urban Sri Lanka.
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publishDate 2021
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spelling CGSpace1173052025-10-14T15:09:09Z Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M. Jayathilake, Nilanthi Bandara, A. Bucatariu, C. Reitemeier, M. Drechsel, Pay food wastes waste reduction stakeholder analysis waste management urban areas municipal authorities local authorities solid wastes food production policies institutions Food waste is a growing concern in Sri Lanka’s urban areas, with local authorities struggling to manage rising volumes from households, markets, restaurants, and institutions. A multi-city assessment across 10 municipalities revealed that despite various actors being involved government agencies, private waste collectors, NGOs coordination remains weak due to fragmented mandates and poor enforcement. Municipalities like Colombo and Kaduwela generate particularly high levels of food waste, especially from public markets. Some cities, including Negombo and Kaduwela, redirect waste to pig farms informally, but most lack structured redistribution systems or legal backing for food recovery. Composting and private-sector collection services exist but are limited by operational challenges. National ministries oversee food production, safety, and waste separately, creating overlap and gaps in implementation at the local level. Civil society initiatives, including food donation and awareness programs, are emerging, but remain small-scale. Without a unified framework, food waste prevention efforts remain piecemeal. The analysis calls for clearer institutional roles, cross-sector collaboration, and the formalization of redistribution channels. Strengthening governance and stakeholder alignment is essential to reducing food loss and achieving circular economy and SDG 12.3 targets in urban Sri Lanka. 2021-08-01 2021-12-31T06:30:35Z 2021-12-31T06:30:35Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117305 en Open Access CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems Aheeyar, Mohamed; Jayathilake, Nilanthi; Bandara, A.; Bucatariu, C.; Reitemeier, M.; Drechsel, Pay. 2021. Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka. Colombo, Sri Lanka: International Water Management Institute (IWMI). CGIAR Research Program on Water, Land and Ecosystems (WLE). 62p.
spellingShingle food wastes
waste reduction
stakeholder analysis
waste management
urban areas
municipal authorities
local authorities
solid wastes
food production
policies
institutions
Aheeyar, Mohamed M. M.
Jayathilake, Nilanthi
Bandara, A.
Bucatariu, C.
Reitemeier, M.
Drechsel, Pay
Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title_full Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title_fullStr Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title_full_unstemmed Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title_short Urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in Sri Lanka
title_sort urban stakeholder analysis for food waste prevention and reduction in sri lanka
topic food wastes
waste reduction
stakeholder analysis
waste management
urban areas
municipal authorities
local authorities
solid wastes
food production
policies
institutions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/117305
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