4.4 Article

Life cycle environmental and economic impact of a food waste recycling-farming system: a case study of organic vegetable farming in Japan

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LIFE CYCLE ASSESSMENT
Volume 26, Issue 5, Pages 963-976

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s11367-021-01879-0

Keywords

Food waste composting; On-site composting; Spinach farming; LCA; Gross value added; Induced employment; Substitution effect

Funding

  1. Yanmar Environmental Sustainability Support Association

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This study conducted an environmental and socio-economic life cycle assessment of a food waste treatment and spinach farming system in Japan. The centralized composting scenario was found to have the lowest impact, with significant reductions in climate change and eutrophication impacts compared to the on-site composting scenario. The study also highlighted the potential environmental benefits of recycling food waste and substituting market organic fertilizer with compost in terms of reducing greenhouse gas emissions.
Purpose Bio-based recycling systems and agricultural production using recycled materials are often evaluated separately. This study performs an environmental and socio-economic life cycle assessment (LCA) of a food waste treatment and spinach farming system in Japan. The environmental and economic tradeoffs of introducing a recycling system and the net environmental benefit of the substitution of market fertilizer considering operation changes are also examined. Methods Three scenarios were developed and compared. In the conventional (CV) scenario, food waste is collected, incinerated, and disposed of in landfill, and the farmer uses market organic fertilizer. The on-site composting (OC) scenario processes food waste using an on-site garbage disposer and transports compost to a nearby spinach farmer. Food waste in the centralized composting (CC) scenario is transported to a centralized composting facility and resultant compost is sent to the farm. Primary data were obtained from field experiments and interviews. Non-greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the field and nitrogen leaching to water systems were simulated using the denitrification-decomposition (DNDC) model. The environmental LCA targeted climate change, eutrophication, and waste landfill. An input-output analysis estimated socio-economic indicators, namely gross added value and employment inducement effect. Results and discussion The scenario with the lowest impact is the CC scenario. Climate change and eutrophication impacts are highest in the OC scenario and waste landfill impacts are most significant in the CV scenario. The weighted impact by LIME2 can be reduced by 47% in the CC scenario and 17% in the OC scenario due to the recycling of food waste instead of dumping in the landfill. The difference in socio-economic indicators between the scenarios was relatively small, although the CV scenario encouraged more employment. The substitution effect of composting, as well as the environmental impact reduction of replacing market organic fertilizer with compost, will result in 28.7% of the avoided impacts in GHG emissions. Conclusions Both composting scenarios are feasible from an environmental and socio-economic perspective when compared with conventional organic production, although there is a tradeoff between waste landfill and GHG emissions for the on-site composting system. However, the OC scenario needs to save electricity to improve its environmental competitiveness with the CV scenario. When considering the substitution effect of composting, it is recommended to take into account that agricultural operation also changes.

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