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AAP
AAP
Politics
Tom Wark

'Pains our producers': Regions urge stop to food waste

Farmers hate to have their produce wasted, while people are going hungry, a regional MP says. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

Farmers would welcome any measure to stop them throwing away millions of tonnes of food every year that could be given to hungry families, regional representatives say.

Politicians representing some of the richest food-producing territory in the country are calling for the government to adopt a bold tax reform proposed by Foodbank Australia.

While some Australians go hungry, enough food to fill the MCG nine times over is thrown away by farmers and growers each year. 

Australia's top hunger relief charity says incentives for growers will encourage them to divert potential waste to those who can give it to the one-in-three households experiencing some lack of food.

"Our farmers hate to see their wonderful bounty and produce going to waste," independent MP for the NSW central-west electorate of Calare, Andrew Gee, said on Wednesday.

"Once this idea is taken to them, they will support it 100 per cent and it pains our producers to see our local community members going hungry."

A national food donation tax incentive is the key proposal in the annual hunger report, released on Wednesday, with food insecurity proving stubborn. 

"We do know that the tax incentive works, it works in the USA, it works in Germany," Foodbank chief executive and former independent MP Kylea Tink told AAP.

"We want this government to seriously consider it in this term. We don't understand why they're not moving on it."

Foodbank Australia CEO Kylea Tink
Australia grows more than enough food, but it has to get to people in need, Kylea Tink says. (Mick Tsikas/AAP PHOTOS)

Foodbank concedes the incentive will not completely cover the increased cost for growers to transport excess produce but argues a tax break to reduce the burden will give more kind-hearted businesses a reason to help tackle food insecurity.

While transportation challenges for getting food to hungry families would seem less acute in the regions, Indi MP Helen Haines said her constituents are some of the hardest hit by food poverty.

"Emergency food relief has become something that happens outside of key emergencies," Ms Haines said.

"I would be very surprised if any farmer I knew thought that that was a bad idea."

Hunger issues are particularly acute among renters and households containing someone with a disability, indicating the government's cost-of-living relief measures are not doing enough to ease food security pressures.

"We grow and produce enough food in Australia to feed our entire population three times over," Ms Tink said.

Overflowing household rubbish bins in Surry Hills, Sydney
There are also environmental benefits to reducing the amount of food going into landfill. (Bianca De Marchi/AAP PHOTOS)

"We just need to fix the system of getting it into people's hands."

The proposal to give farmers financial incentives for donations is nothing new, with Liberal senator Dean Smith introducing a private member's bill with crossbench support to create the scheme in 2024.

But the crossbenchers supporting their former colleague want more cost-of-living relief, saying by easing the burden of other costs more money can be spent on decent meals.

"When we raised the rate for JobSeeker, we saw food insecurity improve. The government could do that right now," Ms Haines said.

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