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Clean Plate Campaign to expand from schools to hawker centres

This article is more than 12 months old

Expansion of campaign will start in October, while it started in schools yesterday

The Clean Plate Campaign, which began its sixth year in schools yesterday to get pupils not to waste food, will be expanded to hawker centres for the first time.

Chief executive officer Sim Bee Hia of charity group Food from the Heart (FFTH) said this yesterday at the launch of this year's Clean Plate Campaign, which kicked off at Kong Hwa School.

Ms Sim said the expansion, which will start off with at least one hawker centre in October, will include more hawker centres and corporates next year, taking the campaign nationwide. She did not elaborate on the details as they are still being discussed.

Sixty-five primary schools - each with about 1,000 pupils - are taking part in the campaign from August to October.

It aims to raise awareness of the environmental and societal impact of food waste.

INCREASE

The first campaign in 2013 saw five schools taking part, and the number rose to 51 last year.

FFTH's Clean Plate Ambassadors, who are volunteers, will visit the schools to share with pupils the message of not wasting food and to inculcate habits of mindful eating.

At each school, they will also count the pupils' empty plates. At the end of the campaign, the top 10 schools with the highest numbers - or the least leftovers - will win trophies.

Last year, a total of 31,000 empty plates were recorded by the 51 participating schools. This year, FFTH aims to hit 48,000 clean plates. Each pupil with a clean plate receives a pen as a token.

Mrs Cheong Ye Ling, principal of Kong Hwa School, said it hopes to teach children to order only what they can finish. It is the first time the school is taking part in the campaign.

"Children can make a request to stallholders for (smaller) portions, for example, ask for less rice, in order to prevent unnecessary wastage," she said.

"Habits are inculcated at a young age, and the practice of not ordering or taking too much food and finishing everything on one's plate should start in primary school."

Tricia Wong, 11, a Primary 6 pupil at Kong Hwa School, who is an environmental ambassador, said she has to remind pupils to finish their food during her weekly recess patrols.

"There are a lot of people going hungry all over the world. So it is pitiful to see food going to waste. It also wastes parents' hard-earned money.

"I encourage my friends not to buy so much food, as it is regretful when the food is wasted," she added.

Education