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Efficiency is the New Yield: Reflections on International Day of Zero Waste

Today, March 30th, marks International Day of Zero Waste. While many see “waste” as a landfill problem, as a Climate-Smart Agriculturist, I see it as a systemic design flaw.
In the agricultural sector, waste isn’t just discarded food; it’s wasted water, lost energy, and “leaked” carbon. When we lose 1/3 of the food produced globally, we aren’t just losing calories we are throwing away the finite resources used to grow them.
Why Zero Waste is a Climate-Smart Priority:
Methane Mitigation: Food waste in landfills is a massive source of methane. By closing the loop through circular bio-economies, we turn “waste” into organic soil amendments.
Resource Efficiency: Every kilogram of food saved is a victory for water conservation and land-use efficiency.
Post-Harvest Innovation: Climate-smart agriculture isn’t just about how we plant; it’s about how we preserve. Cold-chain improvements and solar-powered processing are frontline tools in the zero-waste movement.
Our Path Forward
The transition to a circular food system is no longer optional it is a core pillar of climate resilience. We must move beyond the “take-make-dispose” model and embrace regenerative practices that treat every byproduct as a potential input.
As we celebrate today, let’s ask ourselves: How can we optimize our value chains to ensure that “harvested” truly means “consumed”?
Let’s stop managing waste and start designing it out of our systems entirely.
By Afrina Momotaj