Introduction Food waste is a modifiable contributor to climate change and food insecurity, yet household-level measurement data in Kuwait remain limited. This study aimed to quantify household food waste during a short monitoring period and identify day-of-week patterns in waste generation. Methods Using a 15-day food waste diary, 150 households recorded the weight and composition of daily waste (excess, expired, non-edible) followed by a post-monitoring period questionnaire. Results Food waste declined from 12.5 kg per household in week 1 to 11.7 kg per household in week 2. A 5.8% reduction in food waste occurred from week 1 to week 2. Fridays and Mondays recorded the highest waste, while Wednesdays and Saturdays recorded the lowest. Excess food constituted most food waste in both weeks. Discussion Findings provide short-term household-level waste estimates and identify temporal patterns and composition of waste discarded. Although these results reflect a short monitoring period, they highlight peak waste days and main behaviors contributing to waste generation, which can help inform initiatives aimed at reducing food waste.
Al‐Ali et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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