• Yume founder and CEO Katy Barfield and SecondBite CEO Steve Clifford.
    Yume founder and CEO Katy Barfield and SecondBite CEO Steve Clifford.
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In partnership with Yume, SecondBite will be provided access to more food donations, helping to get food to people who need it, faster. 

Major food manufacturers who subscribe to Yume’s platform have the option of selling excess or end-of-run foods to a diverse network of buyers in the food industry.

If the food doesn’t sell in a reasonable period of time, the platform prompts the seller to consider donating it instead and requests them to nominate a food charity.

As Yume’s first official community partner, SecondBite is leading the way in using the tech innovation to get more food to people in need.

A recent pilot of the donation technology saw SecondBite’s NSW warehouse delivered with more than 11,000 kg of pasta, providing the equivalent of 22,000 meals to Aussies doing it tough.

SecondBite CEO Steve Clifford say the technology is a game changer in helping rescue greater quantities of food.

“Being able to rescue food at the click of a button, and retrieve it faster, fresher and in known quantities, helps make our planning and logistics efforts that much easier.

Our mission is to reduce food waste and get it to people in need, and this does that for us,” said Clifford.

Yume founder and CEO Katy Barfield says the digitised donation workflows allow food rescue organisations to spend less time chasing donations and get on with doing what they do best – getting good food to people in need.

“It just doesn’t make sense that more than three million tonnes of food is wasted from the commercial sector every year in Australia, when one in six of us are facing hunger or food insecurity.

“Yume is the link for manufacturers to sell or donate their produce, rather than send it to landfill, and that leads to better outcomes for all of us,” said Barfield.

Manufacturers who have subscribed to Yume include Mars Food, Unilever and General Mills.

Mars Food General Manager Bill Heague said Yume’s donation technology had helped to streamline and automate Mars’s donation process, and had also added additional pathways.

“As a business, we are committed to sending zero food to landfill, having multiple donation avenues just a click away means we are supporting our local communities and the planet,” Heague said.

Packaging News

APCO has released its 2022-23 Australian Packaging Consumption and Recovery Data Report, the second report released this year in line with its commitment to improving timeliness and relevance of data. 

The AFGC has welcomed government progress towards implementing clear, integrated and consistent changes to packaging across Australia, but says greater clarity is needed on design standards.

It’s been a tumultuous yet progressive year in packaging in Australia, with highs and lows playing out against a backdrop of uncertainty caused in part by the dangling sword of DCCEEW’s proposed Packaging Reform, and in part by the mounting pressure of rising manufacturing costs. Lindy Hughson reviews the top stories for 2024.