Food waste conserving apps

If you are in the UK or North America then you definitely need to check out these Food waste conserving apps. Like our other lists of eco-friendly apps that help the planet. This latest app list will help users conserve and reduce food waste and help the needy at the same time.

Users of these apps will be able to buy restaurant and café leftovers at a discount price. A third to a half of all food produced is lost or wasted. In return, it also contributes up to 10% of the total greenhouse gas emissions driving the climate emergency.

And ever since the outbreak of Covid-19 these apps have grown in popularity, as people engaged more with their neighbors and local areas.

List of Food waste conserving apps

Too Good To Go

This app launched in 2016 and tackles food waste by making a surplus account of unsold food from supermarkets, cafes, restaurants, and independent food retailers. And then makes available the surplus options to consumers at a very cheap price.

Users browse participating venues by name, location, and time of day. There is an element of surprise as the food comes in a lucky dip ‘magic bag’, each costing a third of the retail price. Too Good To Go is used in 15 countries by 32.7 million users.

Olio

Olio is a free app that claims to be the world’s biggest food-sharing network. It connects neighbors with each other — and a network of volunteers with local businesses to take care of surplus food.

The app’s users snap a picture of their items and add them to the listings. Neighbors receive customized alerts and can request anything they fancy, with pick-up arranged via private messaging. Olio saw a fivefold increase in listings during the lockdown, with fans enjoying its community interaction.

Kitche

Kitche app tackles food waste in the home by helping users to keep track of what they have bought and plan meals accordingly. Users scan receipts or upload online receipts stored on their phones. The app will then tap into its recipe bank to plan meals based on the food you have, alerting you to items nearing use-by dates.

The scheme is being expanded, with its developers close to announcing ground-breaking collaborations with local councils to help cut residents’ food waste.

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