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Food waste is a big problem. These small changes can help

A woman selecting produce

There are steps you can take to reduce food waste while prepping, shopping and cooking. (Yuki Iwamura/AFP via Getty Images)

Tossing those unwanted leftovers or unused ingredients into the trash doesn't just hurt your wallet — it also costs the climate.

Over one-third of the food produced in the United States is never eaten, and food waste is the single most common material landfilled and incinerated across the nation, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA).

When food is wasted, so are the natural and human resources that go into producing, processing, transporting, preparing and storing it. Those processes generate significant carbon dioxide emissions, which is a major driver of climate change.

A 2021 EPA report estimates that U.S. food loss and waste produces the equivalent of the annual carbon dioxide emissions of 42 coal-fired power plants, and enough water and energy to supply more than 50 million homes. And that's not including the impact of food that rots in landfills, producing methane, an even more potent greenhouse gas

Nearly a decade ago, federal agencies set a goal of cutting U.S. food waste in half by 2030 — a benchmark that is hurtling ever closer. And now is as good a time as any to reduce waste, thanks to soaring grocery prices.

The USDA says the best way to reduce food waste "is to not create it in the first place." But what does that actually entail?

Morning Edition spoke with Dzung Lewis and Emmy Cho, both chefs and YouTubers, about small steps people can take at the supermarket and in the kitchen to eat more sustainably — and creatively. Here are their tips:

Before you shop

When picking out recipes and making shopping lists, start by surveying what's already in your fridge, says Lewis, the host of the YouTube cooking channel Honeysuckle.

"Try to look around your kitchen and see what you can make with it before heading to the grocery store and buying everything you see on a recipe list, because so many things can be substituted with what you already have," she explains.

In other words, you don't have to stick exactly to the recipe if it means buying a brand new jar of something that'll just end up sitting in the back of the fridge. If you won't have a regular use for that particular product, she says, just swap it out for something else.

For example: If the recipe calls for a lemon and you don't have one, go with an acid you already have in the pantry, like vinegar. You can find more expert advice in NPR's guide to food substitutions.

"Just being more resourceful with what you have ... and being creative with what you have is a skill that I think a lot of us kind of under-utilize," Lewis says.

Before you cook

Cho, host of the YouTube channel EMMYMADE, says her most common food-waste pitfall is one likely shared by many.

"I'll buy a bunch of items and then put them in my refrigerator and then I'll have a beet that's languishing in the corner of my crisper drawer or my cilantro is wilting or melting in my bag in the bottom of my fridge ... because I simply forgot about it," she says, calling it an issue of space management.

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