There is such a thing as a free lunch!

Hundreds of volunteers serve up 5,000 free curries created from over a tonne of surplus food donated by local businesses and farms. On 29th October, Feeding the 5000 Brighton will serve a delicious free lunch to stimulate public action on food waste, both at our community level and on a national policy level.

This special event will take place on the Level from 11am to 3pm, a popular location in the heart of the city, during October Half Term.

“Our free feast is for everyone, whether you want to tackle food waste at home, volunteer in your local community, put pressure on policymakers, or just appreciate a free, nutritious meal,” said Vera Zakharov, coordinator of Brighton & Hove Food Partnership. “If you like good food, care about your environment and want to join the movement to end food waste, come along.”

Brighton & Hove has a vibrant community of 43 local projects tackling food waste, from food redistribution organisations to community composting schemes, surplus cafes and soup runs serving up community meals, and awareness-raising campaigns. Additionally, dozens of food poverty charities make use of surplus food every day to feed their communities.

“Brighton and Hove’s food waste movement is an inspiring example of how local communities can take meaningful action to tackle the nationwide scandal of wasted food. Feeding the 5000 will, no doubt, be a fantastic event and I’m really pleased to see it taking place in Brighton.” said Caroline Lucas MP.

“In the coming months I’ll be working with colleagues across the political spectrum to tackle food poverty and drastically cut the scandalous amount of food wastage we see in the UK.”

Annually, food waste generates 3.3 billion tonnes of greenhouse gas, which is contributing to an already warming world. If food waste was a country it would be the third largest carbon emitter after China and the US.

“Globally 10 per cent of rich countries’ greenhouse gas emissions come from growing food that is never eaten. Reducing waste is one of the most effective ways of dramatically reducing the carbon emissions of our food system and is urgently needed,” said Tristram Stuart, Feedback founder and author of “Waste: Uncovering the Global Food Scandal” (Penguin, 2009).

“Here in the UK an estimated 20 to 40 per cent of UK fruit and vegetables are rejected even before they reach the shops – mostly because they do not match the supermarkets’ excessively strict cosmetic standards.”

Feeding the 5000 Brighton is a public call to action as well as a feast. The public will be inspired to try out new recipes and tips to reduce food waste at home, to get involved in local food waste projects, and to support campaigns tackling food waste at a policy level. Businesses will be called on to do more to reduce their food waste and support local food projects through donation of surplus.

“It is a scandal how much perfectly good food is being rejected and thrown away before it even reaches the shops – simply because it doesn’t meet the strict cosmetic standards set by our biggest retailers. Feeding the 5000 Brighton is an exciting event because it shows that people are willing to make a stand against the wasting of so much fantastic food” said Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall , broadcaster, writer and real food campaigner.

Speakers & special guests include Tristram Stuart, global food waste campaigner and author, Caroline Lucas MP, Douglas McMaster, the chef behind Silo zero waste restaurant, and Lindsay Boswell, CEO of FareShare UK.

The event will also feature workshops and children’s activities, a free grocery giveaway, and info stalls promoting local food waste projects.

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