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Life.Culture.Discovery.

How to reduce food waste in Hong Kong: the food-rescue apps that are bringing innovative new ideas to the table

  • Hong Kong’s food-waste recovery rate is a mere 4 per cent but a slew of new food-rescue programmes aim to improve that and tackle the city’s culture of waste
  • Innovative ideas include mystery boxes of daily leftovers to taking the barley from bakeries’ surplus bread and brewing it into beer

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Carla Martinesi is the founder of food-rescue organisation Chomp in Hong Kong. It and a slew of other new food-rescue apps are attempting to reduce Hong Kong’s culture of waste. Photo: Chomp

When Carla Martinesi had her Eureka moment about starting a food-rescue service in the summer of 2020, she quit her marketing job – much to her mother’s dismay.

Almost three years on, Chomp has saved thousands of meals from 125 vendors including big names such as Slowood, Flash Coffee, Baked by Shangri-La, Levain Bakery, and The Baker & The Bottleman.

The Chomp app suggests nearby partner venues that offer discounted food. Users pay via the app and pick up in person within a certain time to minimise carbon emissions from deliveries.

On average, the offers are half off the retail price and usually come in mystery boxes – where the merchants tailor the selection based on daily leftovers – though this is left to the vendors’ discretion.

The Chomp app suggests nearby partner venues that offer discounted food. Photo: Chomp
The Chomp app suggests nearby partner venues that offer discounted food. Photo: Chomp
Flash Coffee, for instance, sometimes lists ingredients that are nearing expiry – such as Oatly, a plant-based milk. Chomp takes a commission on every transaction.

Martinesi’s brainchild is one of nearly 70 food-rescue programmes in Hong Kong – some dating back to the early 2000s. Despite their efforts, 1.3 million tonnes of food, the equivalent of 100,000 double-decker buses, were still disposed of in 2021 – according to the latest statistics from the Environmental Protection Department.

Joyce Yip
After spending years writing about the world of luxury, Joyce is now a freelance writer obsessed with telling stories about the culture, art, fashion, food and people that shape our city. When not at her desk, she could be found hiking Hong Kong's beautiful trails and chasing after her rescue dogs, Olive and George.
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