Photography
These are some of the photos that I took today. They give me a good starting place so I can figure out exactly what I want for the website.
Changing the Design
Home Page
This was my starting place, the only thing I have changed here is substituting the header for one of my own photographs.
Second Page
This page was a lot easier since I had the basic idea already from the home page. I changed this page a little by adding in more basic illustrations. I know that the photograph used as the header doesn't really work here at all but until I take a better one it will do.
Writing Content
Websites for more home page and problem page content:
https://sustainable.org.nz/sustainable-business-news/five-things-you-need-to-know-about-food-waste/
Put simply, food should be in our bellies (or the bellies of many starving people around the world) instead of rotting in landfills, which releases carbon and wastes resources like the water that went into growing it.
Put simply, food should be in our bellies (or the bellies of many starving people around the world) instead of rotting in landfills, which releases carbon and wastes resources like the water that went into growing it.
https://lovefoodhatewaste.co.nz/helpful-tips/
New Zealanders throw away 157,389 tonnes of food a year. That is equivalent to 271 jumbo jets of food that has to go somewhere to rot, instead of being eaten. All of this food is worth about $1.17 billion each year. That amount of food could feed the population of Dunedin for nearly three years!
Nearly one-third of the food we waste is vegetables.
https://thespinoff.co.nz/food/new-world/food-waste/06-05-2019/supermarkets-create-tonnes-of-food-waste-every-week-heres-what-happens-to-it/
There are thousands of people struggling every day to make ends meet in New Zealand: 800 Aucklanders are experiencing homelessness; 254,000 kids are living in poverty nationwide; and more than 7% of households are living with insufficient food. Issues like child poverty are so dire that last year, parliament passed the Child Poverty Reduction Act in a historic show of political agreement.
In New Zealand, studies have shown that the average household throws away three shopping trolleys worth of edible food a year. That’s 157,398 tonnes (or $1.17 billion worth) of avoidable food going straight to landfill. There, it’ll decompose and release methane – a harmful greenhouse gas which by some measures is 25-30 times more potent than carbon dioxide. On a global scale, more than $1.2 trillion worth of food goes to landfill every year, contributing approximately 8% of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
New Zealanders throw away 157,389 tonnes of food a year. That is equivalent to 271 jumbo jets of food that has to go somewhere to rot, instead of being eaten. All of this food is worth about $1.17 billion each year. That amount of food could feed the population of Dunedin for nearly three years!
Nearly one-third of the food we waste is vegetables.
https://thespinoff.co.nz/food/new-world/food-waste/06-05-2019/supermarkets-create-tonnes-of-food-waste-every-week-heres-what-happens-to-it/
There are thousands of people struggling every day to make ends meet in New Zealand: 800 Aucklanders are experiencing homelessness; 254,000 kids are living in poverty nationwide; and more than 7% of households are living with insufficient food. Issues like child poverty are so dire that last year, parliament passed the Child Poverty Reduction Act in a historic show of political agreement.
In New Zealand, studies have shown that the average household throws away three shopping trolleys worth of edible food a year. That’s 157,398 tonnes (or $1.17 billion worth) of avoidable food going straight to landfill. There, it’ll decompose and release methane – a harmful greenhouse gas which by some measures is 25-30 times more potent than carbon dioxide. On a global scale, more than $1.2 trillion worth of food goes to landfill every year, contributing approximately 8% of all human-caused greenhouse gas emissions.
















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