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Biorefining within food loss and waste frameworks: A review

Journal

RENEWABLE & SUSTAINABLE ENERGY REVIEWS
Volume 154, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.rser.2021.111781

Keywords

Circular economy; Biorefining; Food waste; Waste hierarchy; Waste management; Economic assessment; Environmental assessment

Funding

  1. Fight Food Waste Cooperative Research Centre - Australian Government's Cooperative Research Centre Program
  2. Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship

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This paper examines how biorefining processes are incorporated into waste management frameworks and the variability of their positions within these frameworks. While biorefining processes are frequently included in the recycling and recovery levels of FLW hierarchies, their comparative positions show significant variability.
Biorefining food loss and waste (FLW) to produce bioenergy or bioproducts is an attractive waste management option with potential economic and environmental benefits. This paper aims to identify how biorefining processes have been incorporated into waste management frameworks, and how well their placement or ranking within these frameworks is supported by evidence from the literature. Seven FLW management frameworks (hierarchies) sourced from government and research literature were critically assessed. The ranking of management options within the FLW hierarchy is generally based on environmental outcomes and consequently, it was expected that the FLW hierarchies provide consistent advice. It was found that while biorefining processes were frequently incorporated within the recycling and recovery levels of the FLW hierarchies, their comparative positions were subject to significant variability. A systematic literature review of biorefining processes for FLW management revealed that the environmental impacts of energy-driven processes were frequently assessed and compared. However, comparative environmental assessments of biorefining non-energy products (product driven biorefining) is underrepresented in this literature. Nevertheless, for horticultural FLW feedstocks, product driven biorefining potentially offers attractive economic and environmental outcomes. Product-driven biorefining is likely to be particularly relevant for horticultural FLW, due to the abundance of useful and valuable compounds in these materials.

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