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Put food in stomachs, not landfills: Hong Kong charity wants to alleviate hunger and reduce waste

  • Foodlink ensures surplus meals from a host of outlets go to underprivileged Hongkongers, with new pop-up store to launch soon
  • The charity is one of 15 benefiting from this year’s Operation Santa Claus initiative

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Foodlink’s Head of Operations Aurea Yung, at the charity’s offices in Kwun Tong. Photo: Jonathan Wong

For more than two decades, an organisation in Hong Kong channelling excess food from various sources to the needy has been pursuing a happy ideal: replacing hunger with a smile.

Now, Foodlink Foundation Limited is set to bring even bigger smiles to the underprivileged with a new project that is believed to be the first of its kind in Hong Kong.

“Our mission is to provide a nutritious and healthy meal to every needy person in Hong Kong while simultaneously reducing the pressure on our landfills,” said Aurea Yung Yee-wah, Foodlink’s head of operations.

“Hong Kong’s poverty rate has been rising, especially during Covid-19,” she noted, adding that about 1.65 million, or one-fifth of Hongkongers, lived in poverty.

An aerial view of one of Hong Kong’s landfills. Photo: Felix Wong
An aerial view of one of Hong Kong’s landfills. Photo: Felix Wong

On the other hand, she said, some 3,300 tonnes of food waste were disposed of at landfills in Hong Kong every day.

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