Jack Convery pops into a London branch of Italian eatery Coco di Mama to grab a cut-price lunch ordered on his smartphone's food-sharing app Karma.
The 27-year-old Amazon employee — with an eye for a bargain and for helping the environment — uses a mobile phone app that sells surplus food from hundreds of UK restaurants at discounted prices.
"Anything I can do to help the environment and look after the budget as well is beneficial, so yeah, it's a win-win," Convery said after collecting his bag from the counter near Old Street Tube station.
Tessa Clarke, co-founder of the food-sharing app 'Olio' poses for a picture. AFP
"It ends up working out much cheaper than to go to (British supermarket) Tesco and buy a meal for one," he adds, noting that he can usually source his daily dinner for about £3.50 ($4.54, 4.10 euros) via the app.
Decomposing food waste is a key source of greenhouse gases — and a staggering one third of all food is thrown away, according to industry estimates.
Environmental danger
Amid growing public outcry over the climate emergency, consumers are switching on to the environmental danger of carbon dioxide and methane emissions.
A Karma app user collects his food, ordered through the food-sharing app. AFP
Britain's cafes and restaurants are also embracing apps that generate some revenue from rescued food that would otherwise be destined for landfill.
However some restaurants happily give unsold food to homeless charities on a daily basis.
Swedish start-up Karma was founded in Stockholm in 2016 and its app now helps serve 1.0 million users in Britain, France and home market Sweden. In the UK alone, it offers 2,000 outlets.
Apps are important
Joao Campari, food expert at environmental campaigners WWF International, argues that apps are an "important" way to cut waste.
A logo is pictured on the wrapping of a baguette displayed for sale. AFP
"With food loss and waste creating at least eight percent of all emissions, it's vital that as many people as possible reduce their personal food waste," Campari said.
"To do this, we need tools that are easy to use, and also help raise awareness of the scale of the problem.
"Most people have a mobile device so apps are an obvious and important way of educating and enabling action."
A woman uses the Olio mobile app to look for food goods. AFP
Yet in developed nations, most food waste occurs in restaurants and private homes — at a time when an estimated 820 million people in the world do not have enough to eat, according to the World Health Organization.
Main competitor is rubbish bin
"We throw away one third of food we produce each year," says Tessa Clarke, co-founder of Olio.
"What that means is that roughly 10 percent of annual greenhouse gas emissions come from food waste alone, which I like to point out to people is four to five times greater than the carbon emissions that come from the global aviation industry."
A worker at a Coco di Mama food outlet, uploads foods at reduced prices. AFP
She adds: "I like to say that our main competitor is the rubbish bin."
While these apps are clearly benefitting consumers and food retailers, experts say they do not address the core problem.
"These are good for raising awareness but they're not in themselves solutions, because there's still food surplus or food waste being produced," mulls Professor Martin Caraher at City University London's Centre for food Policy.
"With 10 billion meals a year still ending up in the bin, the UK has not closed the door on the food waste problem."
Agence France-Presse