Spoilage in a sentence as a noun

Heat sickness is a very real concern, along with food spoilage and pets.

Sometimes it's from theft, other times it's from spoilage, weather, etc.

We waste drastic amounts of food every year thanks to spoilage.

The issue is that they have spoilage and a cost-of carry that is not insignificant.

Cargo shrink can be theft, spoilage, misplacement, or a bunch of other similar reasons.

Like maeon3 pointed out, we deal with pollution, spoilage and waste heat by modifying the process, not the laws of physics.

Not because of spoilage, but because of cutthroat competition and a consumer that doesn't have the patience to wait for you.

But assuming this is eventually cheaper than meat, keeps longer, has less problems with bugs/contamination/spoilage, is quicker easier to shape into burgers plus lower fat and healthier then fast food chains are going to offer it.

Pollution was an unavoidable side effect of the Industrial Revolution, and spoilage is an unavoidable side effect of long-distance transport of perishable goods, and heat is an unavoidable side effect of pretty much everything, but all are still legitimate problems.

If that is not good enough, basic fairness states that a virtual good with no manufacturing, spoilage or delivery costs without a secondary market should be sold for substantially less than a physical good with manufacturing, spoilage and delivery costs with a secondary market that competes with new goods sold.

Spoilage definitions

noun

the amount that has spoiled

noun

the process of becoming spoiled

See also: spoiling

noun

the act of spoiling something by causing damage to it; "her spoiling my dress was deliberate"

See also: spoil spoiling