Help Feed Oʻahu
Instead of letting your food go to waste, join Aloha Harvest in collecting and redistributing food to nourish and strengthen our community on Oʻahu.
With Your Help
Get involved in the rescue!
Feed the Hungry
In Hawaiʻi, 48% of families are food insecure.(1) Aloha Harvest acts as a collaborator with social service agencies to supply free food to the most vulnerable members of our community.
Need or know someone who needs assistance? Click this link to view our food assistance page.
Protect the Environment
In Hawaiʻi, 237,000 tons of food is wasted annually.(2) When dumped in landfills, food rots under anaerobic conditions, producing methane, a greenhouse gas at least 25x more potent than carbon dioxide. By diverting excess food from entering the waste stream, Aloha Harvest reduces our environmental footprint and our dependence on landfills.
On O'ahu, we incinerate our waste first and then dump the ash in a landfill. However, due to its high moisture content, burning food waste is highly inefficient since it requires more energy to process in the incinerator.
Boost the Economy
Hawaiʻi spends over $4.5 billion annually importing approximately 88% of its food, (3) making us vulnerable to events that disrupt shipping. The cost of our annual food waste comes out to about $1.025 billion annually.(2) Food rescue saves the state money and strengthens our
economy in both of these areas.
View Our Most Recent Impact Report
Every 3 months we publish our data and program updates via quarterly impact reports. View our Reports page to see all past reports.
Follow Us
Stay tuned with our latest volunteer opportunities, distributions, partner highlights and more!
Follow us @alohaharvest on Instagram and Facebook.
Sources:
(1) Pruitt, A. S., Zhang, W., Wu, Y., Bird, O., Nakamura, B. & Barile, J. P. (2021). Addressing Hunger & Food Insecurity among Hawai‘i’s Families. Prepared for the College of Social Sciences, UH Mānoa and First Insurance Company of Hawai‘i, Honolulu, H.I.
(2) Loke, Matthew K., and PingSun Leung. “Quantifying food waste in Hawaii’s food supply chain.” Waste Management & Research 33.12 (2015): 1076-1083.
(3) Loke, Matthew K., and PingSun Leung. “Hawai‘i’s food consumption and supply sources: benchmark estimates and measurement issues.” Agricultural and Food Economics 1 (2013): 1-18.