Podcast

Tristram Stuart

Tristram Stuart International award-winning author, speaker and campaigner

Hannah MacInnes joins Tristram Stuart, an international award-winning author, speaker, campaigner and expert on the environmental and social impacts of food on The Klosters Forums Feed & Flourish Podcast series, to discuss the future of agrifood systems in the context of biodiversity regeneration.

Tristram Stuart is an international award-winning author, speaker, campaigner and expert on the environmental and social impacts of food. His books, The Bloodless Revolution: a cultural history of vegetarianism from 1600 to the present (2006) and Waste: Uncovering the Global Food Scandal (2009), have been described as “a genuinely revelatory contribution to the history of human ideas” (The Times) and have been translated into several languages. His TED talk (2012) has been watched over 1.6 million times.

Tristram started publicly campaigning on food waste as a lone pioneer in 2002. He has been a principal protagonist in building the global movement that has mobilised hundreds of organisations, millions of individuals, achieved mass behaviour change, obtained commitments from the world’s biggest food companies and governments, and a Sustainable Development Goal (12.3) to halve food waste by 2030. Tristram is an official UN Champion of this Global Goal.

Although he no longer has a formal role at the environmental charity he founded, Feedback (www.feedbackglobal.org), it has played a pivotal role in catalysing and leading the global food waste movement. Feedback has driven changes in supermarket policies and international legislation and consistently punches way above its weight at the highest level globally.

In 2016, he founded Toast Ale (www.toastale.com) which upcycles unsold fresh bread into award-winning craft beer. After 3 years of operations, Toast brewed up 1 million slices of surplus bakery bread into delicious, refreshing beer. Toast is brewing in 6 countries. 100% of its distributable profits go to Feedback and other aligned charities worldwide. Its unique impact investment structure, called “Equity for Good”, pledges investors to reinvest any capital gains into planet-saving organisations (for profit or not-for-profit).

Tristram won the international environmental award in 2011, The Sophie Prize. He is an Ashoka Fellow, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer and a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader.