Rao Madhura, Bast Aalt, de Boer Alie
Food Claims Centre Venlo, Maastricht University, Campus Venlo, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
University College Venlo, Maastricht University, Campus Venlo, Maastricht, the Netherlands.
Food Secur. 2022;14(6):1377-1385. doi: 10.1007/s12571-022-01291-y. Epub 2022 May 21.
The COVID-19 pandemic has been detrimental to food security globally. The Netherlands, despite its advanced stage of development, saw a surge in food insecurity among its most vulnerable citizens. Dutch food aid is managed by private charities and social organisations that often aim to address the problems of food insecurity and food waste by redistributing surplus food that is safe to consume. This paper investigates how the pandemic impacted surplus food redistribution in the country by employing an Exploratory-Descriptive-Qualitative approach. This is done by analysing data from interviews with relevant stakeholders involved in redistributing surplus food in the Netherlands as well as media reports on the topic. Our findings indicate that the interviewed organisations experienced drastic fluctuations in supply and demand. To cope with these changes, rapid organisational and supply chain innovation was observed. Next to this, there seems to have been disproportionate negative impact on smaller charities in comparison to bigger, better established organisations. Based on our findings, we discuss what the future of surplus food distribution in the Netherlands might look like and why changes made during the pandemic must be well documented and carefully analysed.
新冠疫情对全球粮食安全造成了不利影响。荷兰尽管发展水平较高,但其最脆弱公民的粮食不安全状况却激增。荷兰的食品援助由私人慈善机构和社会组织管理,这些机构通常旨在通过重新分配安全可食用的剩余食品来解决粮食不安全和食物浪费问题。本文采用探索性-描述性-定性方法,研究了疫情对该国剩余食品再分配的影响。这是通过分析来自荷兰参与重新分配剩余食品的相关利益相关者的访谈数据以及关于该主题的媒体报道来完成的。我们的研究结果表明,受访组织经历了供需的剧烈波动。为应对这些变化,观察到了快速的组织和供应链创新。除此之外,与规模更大、根基更稳的组织相比,小型慈善机构似乎受到了不成比例的负面影响。基于我们的研究结果,我们讨论了荷兰剩余食品分配的未来可能会是什么样子,以及为什么必须充分记录并仔细分析疫情期间所做的改变。