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

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.

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