France Is Banning Supermarkets From Throwing Away UNSOLD Foods, Must Be Given To Charities

A new law in France will make sure supermarkets won’t be able to throw out unsold food, reports The Guardian. In a unanimous vote by the French national assembly, a legislation was passed to prevent grocers from throwing out or destroying unsold products.

Instead, they’ll be required by law to donate to charities.

Most packaged foods sport a “Best By” date somewhere on the product. While they’re still edible after that period, stores don’t tend to keep the ones past the printed dates stocked. These foods are usually what’s destroyed, even if they’re still perfectly safe to eat.

Supermarkets that fail to comply with this new law and purposely soil their foods will face fines up to €75,000 ($82,500 US) or two years of jail time.

France has been working to find a solution to its food waste issue and those struggling to eat in the country. The goal is to reduce food waste in half within the next decade. Because of this, the new law also introduces an education program dealing with food waste in schools and businesses.

 

More content

Eating Out
Jack In The Box Rolls Out Matcha For Its 75th Anniversary
Matcha keeps finding its way into fast food menus, and Jack in the Box just made it official. As part of its 2026 lineup, the…
,
Eating Out
Subway Is Giving Away Free Footlongs If You’re In the Middle Seat Of A Plane
Southwest Airlines recently announced it was ending its open seating policy, which means many of its travelers will be assigned a middle or “sandwich” seat.…
,
Culture
Guy Fieri Tried On A ‘Normal’ Look And The Internet Wasn’t Ready
Guy Fieri didn’t wake up one morning and decide to tone it down. The spiked hair, the flames, the sunglasses isn’t going anywhere. But for…
,
Burger
We Deliver!

Enter your email address below and we'll deliver our top stories straight to your inbox