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Peer-reviewed

Environmental and economic implications of recovering resources from food waste in a circular economy

Peter C. Slorach, Harish Kumar Jeswani, Rosa M. Cuéllar-Franca, Adisa Azapagic

The Science of The Total Environment · 2019

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Summary

Around a third of food is wasted globally, requiring significant resources for its treatment and disposal, in addition to wasting valuable resources. Following the circular economy principles, this waste should ideally be avoided, and if not possible, treated to recover resources. This paper considers the life cycle environmental and economic implications of recovering energy and material resources from food waste, focusing on the UK situation. Four treatment methods are considered: anaerobic digestion, in-vessel composting, incineration and landfilling. The results show that per tonne of waste treated, anaerobic digestion has the lowest environmental impacts in 13 out of the 19 categories considered in the study, including net-negative global warming potential. In-vessel composting is the

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2019.07.322
Catalogue ID
SNmoef27vo-ekywln
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