OVERCONSUMPTION AND WASTE

In Brazil, every day 41,000 tons of food are thrown away, according to UN estimates. This would feed 25 million people. Paradoxically, the country still has 3.4 million undernourished people. New patterns of production and consumption, minimizing environmental impact and meeting the basic needs of the society, are essential to build more sustainable tomorrows.

Pallets of Melons (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

CULTURE OF WASTE...

Brazil is one of the countries which waste most food in the world - perhaps a harmful habit of a tropical country where "whatever you plant yields". It is estimated that half of food are wasted during handling; 30% is lost during harvesting and transport, 10% in supply centers and 10% in supermarkets and consumers' homes. In the image above, boxed melons in Supply Center (CEASA) in Irajá, in Rio de Janeiro, before being distributed at trade shows.

Man with tomatoes (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Tomatoes, oranges and tangerines, rotten and in good condition, mixed in a dumpster in Ceasa in Irajá, Rio city. (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Truck loaded with bags of lemons for sale (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

The planet produces enough food to feed 12 billion people, but almost 900 million people live in food insecurity (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

Orange Picker (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Reducing the waste by 30% means further decrease, by 30%, in the use of land, fertilizers, pesticides and seeds (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

Seller bagging oranges for sale (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

An average Brazilian family spent R$ 478 monthly to buy food in 2013. If the 20% waste of food was eliminated, R$ 90 would no longer go down the drain (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Oranges in the water (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Various nutrients are present in parts of food usually discarded, such as seeds and bark, bast, leaves and stems (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

Unloading Truck (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

In the case of vegetables, the rate of losses of these products is approximately 35% of the harvest (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

A Food Market box (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Street Vendor (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Collection Museum Of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

I CONSUME, THEREFORE I AM

What reasons lead people to consume excessively, above their daily needs? The issue is complex, but the global capitalist society encourages overconsumption. Humanity needs now 1.5 planet to maintain its general consumption pattern. A quarter of the world population living in developed countries demand no less than three quarters of the planet's natural resources. Will we be able to combine sustainable consumption with quality of life, satisfaction and respect for the planet? Above, traders and customers in one of the busiest streets of downtown Rio.

Consumers buying cookies on Alfândega Street (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Collection Museum Of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Movement in the Society of Friends of the Surroundings of Rua da Alfândega (SAARA), one of Rio's major trade areas (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

Customer and goods (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Collection Museum Of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

The number of Brazilians who were paying some kind of instalment in February this year reached 40%, which stands for an increase by four percentage points against the same month in 2015 (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

A Variety store and customers (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Collection Museum Of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Each Brazilian spent, on average, R$ 810.84 on clothing in 2014, according to Ibope survey (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Old cars in the lot (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

DISPOSABLE CARS

In 2015 alone, 2,569,014 zero kilometer vehicles were licensed in Brazil. Their number has more than doubled in ten years. Out of circulation, older vehicles end up in junkyards. Have you ever imagined that cars can become outmoded as quickly as old cell phones? This is already a reality and can very likely become the new standard in the automotive industry. Car manufacturers are reducing the launch range of new generations of car models.

Stripped car and Kobi in the bushes of the lot (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Brazilian governments' encouragement to buy new cars favors the culture of disposal (Photo: Gustavo Otero).

Car in the background seen from another one (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Yet, there are changes on the horizon: new generations are less likely to buy cars or even get a driver's license (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Traffic at the sanitary landfill (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

MOUNTAINS OF GARBAGE

The generation of waste in Brazil has grown fivefold in relation to population growth from 2010 to 2014. With limited recycling actions carried out in municipalities, landfills receive many materials that could be reused. The Seropédica Waste Treatment Center in Rio receives 12,000 tons every day, from the capital and the cities of Seropédica and Itaguai. The results are huge mountains of waste - receiving environmentally appropriate treatment. Methane, highly polluting gas released by the decomposition of waste in the landfill, is drained to the "flares", a kind of chimneys where it is burned.

Detail of pipe discharging raw leachate (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Collection Museum Of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Leachate - liquid resulting from organic waste degradation process - is collected and treated in a sanitary landfill (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Operations running 24/7 at the landfill (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

Aerial view of the Seropédica landfill in Rio, opened in 2011 (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Trucks at the sanitary landfill (2016) by Gustavo Otero | Colection Museum of TomorrowMuseu do Amanhã

The landfill has a usable life of over 20 years. After that, the municipalities will have to think of another disposal area (photo: Gustavo Otero).

Credits: Story

Museu do Amanhã, 2016
Curator: Luiz Alberto Oliveira
Content Director: Alfredo Tolmasquim
Exhibition manager and Tomorrow Observatory: Leonardo Menezes
Editor: Emanuel Alencar
Content Writer: Eduardo Carvalho
Trainee: Thais Cerqueira

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
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