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'Clean Plate' campaign is commendable but China still needs to find best approach
Updated 16:32, 05-Jan-2021
First Voice
A volunteer suggests a dining family to save food at a community restaurant in Jiangsu Province, east China, August 13, 2020. /VCG

A volunteer suggests a dining family to save food at a community restaurant in Jiangsu Province, east China, August 13, 2020. /VCG

Editor's note: CGTN's First Voice provides instant commentary on breaking stories. The daily column clarifies emerging issues and better defines the news agenda, offering a Chinese perspective on the latest global events.

Chinese media has been embracing with enthusiasm a "reducing-food-waste" campaign this August. The concept is nothing new. In 2013, the phrase "clean plate" was one of China's ten buzzwords of the year. The "clean plate" campaign that year, which also aimed to crack down on food waste, mainly targeted officials throwing extravagant banquets.

This time around, the wider Chinese public has been called on to participate. On August 11, Chinese President Xi Jinping urged Chinese people to reduce food waste, warning that food waste has reached an alarming level. Despite China's bumper grain harvests in recent years, he emphasized that the country still needed to "maintain a sense of crisis" on its food security, especially during the COVID-19 epidemic.

While this year's "clean plate" campaign is not directly linked to a real food crisis, the COVID-19 crisis has brought such a likelihood to Chinese authorities' attention and prompted them to take the issue of food waste more seriously.

Chen Mengshan, president of China Agricultural Technology Economics Association, pointed out in an interview with People's Daily that although China didn't face food shortages during the epidemic, it couldn't afford to overlook the disruptions the health crisis caused to the country's agricultural production and food imports. As the pandemic poses risks to food security all around the world, many countries had to restrict food exports to secure their own domestic supply, which has led to the rise of food prices globally. This has made the Chinese leadership more aware of the risks associated with the country's food security. As they try to fend off such risks, the enormous amount of food waste in China was also brought to their attention.

The issue does deserve public attention, and China needs to bring back its long-cherished tradition of not wasting food. The idea of thriftiness goes far back in Chinese history. In ancient times, there was a well-known Chinese poem calling attention to farmers' hard work and encouraging people to "cherish" food. Through time, thriftiness became a virtue in Chinese culture. When the People's Republic of China was founded in 1949, the country's economy was very much in tatters, and food in dire demand. With the rapid growth of the Chinese economy and the dramatic increase in people's personal incomes, the concern of food shortages has been largely eliminated but the issue of food waste has also arisen.

China's food waste in urban areas every year is reported to be 17 million to 18 million tonnes, an amount enough to feed 30 million to 40 million people for a whole year. Although waste in Western developed countries per capita tends to be even higher, China's figure is still staggering. Given this, it is a commendable step China has taken in reducing food waste.

That said, there have been some bizarre scenes during the campaign that have captured the public imagination. Immediately after the instructions from the government, there have been frenzied attempts to implement the call. For example, on August 14, it was reported that a restaurant in China's Changsha City put weighing scales at the entrance that allowed customers to weigh themselves so that they could order different meal packages recommended by the restaurant based on their weight. Another restaurant in the same city also decided to charge people 1 yuan for every 125 grams of food they have wasted. Practices like these have drawn huge controversy online.

Li Guoxiang, research fellow at the Rural Development Institute, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, commented that because the campaign just started, there has been some confusion about the approach to achieving the goal, and some have clearly gone too far. That said, this has prompted the public to think deeper about how much regulations should be involved in this area and in what way. Li believes, as the discussions mature, the confusion will diminish, and the public should be given the right to choose what to eat and how much to order.

Echoing the message, People's Daily had put out a message on Weibo on August 16, calling for a scientific approach to the campaign and cutting out the unreasonable policies that had surfaced so far. This is the right message. While the current thriftiness campaign is much needed, China still needs to find the right way to do it in order to prevent policies from being unreasonable or too intrusive.

By Xu Sicong

(If you want to contribute and have specific expertise, please contact us at opinions@cgtn.com.)

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