This project aims to:
- Update knowledge on Australian consumers’ fridge use, storage and disposal of red meat, and how wastage could potentially be reduced
- Measure the temperature of fridges in Australian households according to different seasons, and understand how fridge temperature is affected by cooking and storing behaviour
- Understand how and why consumers are using their fridges and freezers to store meat, and how this impacts how much meat they waste
To achieve these aims, we have designed a mixed methods study for the pilot phase of this project.
We will collect real-time data on temperature and electricity use from fridges in Australian households. In addition, we will interview households about how they buy, store, consume, and dispose of meat. The interviews will take place in spring/summer and autumn/winter, so we can track how meat consumption, use, and wastage change across different times of the year.
Outcomes and impact
In reducing red meat wastage, this project will potentially contribute directly to substantial greenhouse gas savings, with multiple societal and environmental benefits.
The findings of the first phase of the project will provide valuable information to retailers about how Australian consumers store and consume meat. With this data, retailers can be more certain about shelf life, and therefore use fewer markdowns and discard less product in stores. Consumers will also have greater surety that the product they are consuming is still fresh, reducing wastage and contributing to health and wellbeing.
A potential second phase of the project would explore how the findings might be used to create education campaigns and easy-to-understand and effective interventions to engage consumers in reducing meat waste.
Funding
This project is funded by the Fight Food Waste Cooperate Research Centre, and Meat and Livestock Australia.
Further information
For further information about this project, please contact Dr Simon Lockery via simon.lockrey@rmit.edu.au or Professor Cecily Maller via cecily.maller@rmit.edu.au.