Content
- Food worth ₹1.55 lakh cr. wasted annually
- Reservation ruse
Food worth ₹1.55 lakh cr. wasted annually
Why in News?
- On 30 March 2026 (International Day of Zero Waste), global attention focused on food waste, highlighting contradiction between 1.05 billion tonnes wasted annually and persistent global hunger.
Issue in Brief
- Despite sufficient global production, 783 million people remain undernourished, showing that food insecurity is driven more by distribution inefficiencies, supply chain gaps, and consumption patterns than production shortages.
Relevance
- GS Paper III: Agriculture, Food Security, Environment (GHG emissions), Economy (Supply chains)
- GS Paper II: Governance (PDS, NFSA, welfare delivery)
Practice Question
- “Food waste in India reflects systemic inefficiencies in supply chains rather than mere consumption behaviour. Analyse its implications for food security, economy, and environment, and suggest measures.” (250 words)
Static Background and Basics
- Food waste occurs across the supply chain including post-harvest losses, storage inefficiencies, transport gaps, retail discard, and household-level wastage, making it a systemic rather than behavioural issue alone.
- It is directly linked to SDG 2 (Zero Hunger) and SDG 12.3, which targets halving global food waste by 2030, emphasising sustainable consumption and production systems.
Key Data and Evidence
- According to UNEP Food Waste Index Report 2024, the world wastes 1.05 billion tonnes of food annually, with households contributing 60%, food services 28%, and retail sector 12%.
- Globally, around 783 million people face hunger, while 3.1 billion people cannot afford a healthy diet, reflecting structural inequities in access rather than supply inadequacy.
- India wastes approximately 78–80 million tonnes of food annually (₹1.55 lakh crore value), while about 194 million people remain undernourished, highlighting severe inefficiency in distribution systems.
- Per capita food waste in India stands at 55 kg/year, which is lower than developed countries, but large population size results in massive aggregate wastage.
Dimensions
Economic Dimension
- Food waste results in massive economic losses, reducing farmer incomes, supply chain efficiency, and overall agricultural productivity, thereby weakening the contribution of agriculture to GDP growth and rural development.
- Low food processing levels in India (~8% compared to 65% in USA) increase perishability, limiting value addition and reducing opportunities for agro-based industrialisation.
Food Security Dimension
- Food waste reduces effective food availability, worsening hunger, malnutrition, and inequality, especially among vulnerable populations dependent on public distribution and welfare schemes.
- It exposes inefficiencies in schemes like PDS and NFSA, where procurement is high but distribution and storage gaps reduce actual nutritional outcomes.
Environmental Dimension
- Food waste contributes 8–10% of global greenhouse gas emissions, with decomposing food releasing methane, which has significantly higher global warming potential than carbon dioxide.
- Wasted food also implies wasted natural resources, including water, land, energy, and labour, intensifying ecological stress, especially in water-scarce regions like Punjab.
Governance Dimension
- Weak infrastructure such as inadequate cold storage, poor logistics, and lack of scientific warehousing leads to large-scale post-harvest losses, particularly in cereals, fruits, and vegetables.
- Absence of a comprehensive national food waste database and legal framework for redistribution limits evidence-based policymaking and accountability in reducing waste.
Social and Ethical Dimension
- Food waste reflects a moral contradiction where surplus coexists with deprivation, indicating ethical failure of consumption systems and erosion of cultural values respecting food as sacred (“Anna Brahma”).
- Changing consumption patterns, urban lifestyles, and overconsumption have normalised food waste, reducing societal sensitivity towards resource conservation and equity.
Agricultural and Supply Chain Dimension
- Significant losses occur at farm level due to lack of grading, sorting, mechanisation, scientific storage, and access to markets, particularly affecting small and marginal farmers.
- Use of outdated storage systems like jute sacks instead of hermetic storage technologies contributes to spoilage, pest attacks, and moisture-related losses.
Challenges
- Structural inefficiencies in supply chain, including fragmented logistics, poor infrastructure, and weak integration between production and markets, continue to drive large-scale food losses.
- Lack of regulatory mechanisms for food redistribution and accountability results in edible surplus food being discarded instead of utilised.
- Behavioural factors such as overconsumption, lack of awareness, and cultural shifts away from conservation ethics exacerbate household-level food waste.
- Climate change-induced extreme weather events increase crop losses and storage vulnerability, worsening food waste at multiple stages.
Way Forward
- Establish a National Cold Chain and Storage Infrastructure Mission, prioritising states like Punjab, Haryana, and Uttar Pradesh, treating it as critical food security and economic infrastructure.
- Enact legislation mandating redistribution of surplus food from supermarkets, hotels, and events, supported by tax incentives and partnerships with food banks.
- Strengthen Farmer Producer Organisations (FPOs) with access to mechanisation, scientific storage technologies, and logistics to reduce post-harvest losses at source.
- Introduce mandatory food waste measurement and public reporting for large food businesses, aligned with UNEP Food Waste Index methodology.
- Expand food processing sector and promote value addition, preservation technologies, and agro-industries, reducing perishability and enhancing farmer income.
- Integrate food waste reduction into India’s climate commitments (NDCs), recognising its significant contribution to greenhouse gas emissions.
- Promote behavioural change through education, campaigns, and revival of cultural ethos that emphasise respect for food and responsible consumption.
Prelims Pointers
- UNEP Food Waste Index 2024:
- 1.05 billion tonnes food waste globally
- SDG Target:
- 12.3 (halve food waste by 2030)
- Food waste emissions:
- 8–10% of global GHG emissions
- India:
- ~80 million tonnes food waste annually
Reservation ruse
Why in News?
- Recently, Union government proposed Constitution (131st Amendment) Bill, 2026 alongside delimitation, linked to implementation of Nari Shakti Vandan Adhiniyam (106th Amendment, 2023).
Issue in Brief
- The bundling of women’s reservation with delimitation exercise has raised concerns that federal representation may be altered disproportionately, affecting balance between States with differing population growth trajectories.
Relevance
- GS Paper II: Constitution, Federalism, Representation, Parliament
- GS Paper I: Social Justice (Women’s representation)
Practice Question
- “Linking women’s reservation with delimitation raises serious constitutional and federal concerns. Critically examine.” (250 words)
Static Background and Basics
- The 106th Constitutional Amendment (2023) provides 33% reservation for women in Lok Sabha and State Assemblies, but implementation is contingent upon post-Census delimitation exercise.
- Delimitation refers to redrawing of electoral constituencies based on population changes, governed by Articles 82 and 170 of the Constitution.
- Seat allocation has been frozen based on 1971 Census (via 42nd Amendment, 1976), extended until post-2026 Census by 84th Amendment (2001) to protect States with population control success.
Key Provisions of Proposed 131st Amendment
- Increases Lok Sabha strength from 543 to potentially 850 seats, significantly expanding representation and altering electoral arithmetic across States.
- Replaces fixed Census reference with flexible definition where “population” is determined by Parliament through ordinary law, reducing constitutional safeguards.
- Removes constitutional freeze on seat distribution, enabling population-proportional redistribution of parliamentary seats across States.
Federal Implications
- Based on 2011 Census, Hindi-heartland States may increase seats from 207 to 366, raising share from 38.1% to 43.1%, significantly enhancing political influence.
- Southern States may increase from 132 to 176 seats, but their share declines from 24.3% to 20.7%, reducing proportional representation.
- North-East and eastern regions also face declining share, raising concerns over marginalisation in national decision-making processes.
Dimensions
Constitutional Dimension
- Removal of seat freeze undermines principle of cooperative federalism, as States that controlled population growth lose representation advantage.
- Shifting Census reference from Constitution to ordinary law weakens constitutional certainty and institutional safeguards.
- Raises question of balance between “one person, one vote” principle and federal equity among States.
Federalism and Governance Dimension
- Population-based redistribution may penalise States that invested in health, education, and fertility reduction, contradicting incentive-based federalism.
- Could deepen regional political imbalance, affecting policy priorities, fiscal transfers, and Centre-State relations.
- Risks weakening trust in federal compact, especially among southern and smaller States.
Political Dimension
- Delimitation may reshape electoral landscape by increasing representation of demographically larger northern States, influencing parliamentary majority formation.
- Timing and bundling with women’s reservation raise concerns of political strategy overriding institutional deliberation.
Gender Justice Dimension
- Women’s reservation is a long-pending reform aimed at enhancing political participation and representation of women in legislatures.
- However, linking it to delimitation delays implementation and risks instrumentalising gender justice for broader political restructuring.
Ethical Dimension
- Raises ethical question of whether progressive reforms (women’s empowerment) should be tied to contentious structural changes affecting federal balance.
- Highlights need for transparent, consultative policymaking in constitutional amendments affecting representation.
Key Concerns
- Lack of explicit constitutional guarantee to maintain inter-State seat proportion, despite political assurances.
- Potential erosion of fiscal federalism, as political representation influences resource allocation and policy priorities.
- Absence of wide consultation and debate on major structural reform impacting democratic representation.
- Risk of creating regional asymmetry and political alienation.
Way Forward
- Decouple women’s reservation implementation from delimitation, enabling immediate enforcement within existing parliamentary framework through rotational seat allocation.
- Ensure broad-based consultation with States, especially those affected by representation changes, before undertaking delimitation reforms.
- Consider hybrid formula balancing population proportionality with federal equity, preserving incentives for population stabilisation.
- Provide constitutional safeguards ensuring no State suffers disproportionate reduction in representation share.
- Strengthen Inter-State Council and parliamentary scrutiny mechanisms for consensus-based constitutional reforms.
Prelims Pointers
- 106th Amendment (2023):
- 33% reservation for women
- 42nd Amendment (1976):
- Freeze based on 1971 Census
- 84th Amendment (2001):
- Extended freeze till post-2026 Census
- Articles:
- 82, 170 → Delimitation provisions


