LCA as decision support tool in the food and feed sector: evidence from R&D case studies
Denise Ott (),
Shashank Goyal,
Rosmarie Reuss,
Herwig O. Gutzeit,
Jens Liebscher,
Jens Dautz,
Margo Degieter,
Hans Steur and
Emanuele Zannini
Additional contact information
Denise Ott: EurA AG
Shashank Goyal: EurA AG
Rosmarie Reuss: EurA AG
Herwig O. Gutzeit: Technical University of Dresden
Jens Liebscher: Bio.S Biogas GmbH
Jens Dautz: TERRA URBANA GmbH
Margo Degieter: Ghent University
Hans Steur: Ghent University
Emanuele Zannini: University College Cork
Environment Systems and Decisions, 2023, vol. 43, issue 1, 129-141
Abstract:
Abstract Biomass waste and waste-derived feedstocks are important resources for the development of sustainable value-added products. However, the provision and preparation of biomass as well as all possible downstream processing steps need to be thoroughly analyzed to gain environmentally sound and economically viable products. Additionally, its impacts are substantially determined by decisions made at early development stages. Therefore, sustainability assessment methods can support to improve the production process, reduce waste, and costs and help decision-making, at the industrial as well as policy levels. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) is an analysis technique to assess environmental impacts associated with all product's life cycle stages. It is a well-established tool to drive development towards a sustainable direction, however, its application in the earlier research phase is surrounded by practical challenges. The overall objective of this paper is to provide an understanding of the environmental issues involved in the early stages of product and process development and the opportunities for life cycle assessment techniques to address these issues. Thus, herein two LCA case studies are presented, dealing with novel approaches for food and feed supply through implementing the valorization and upcycling of waste and side-streams, respectively. In both case studies, LCA is used as a decision support tool for R&D activities to launch environmentally sound products to market, as well as to highlight the usefulness of LCA for identifying environmental issues at an earlier stage of development, regardless of product, process, or service.
Keywords: Sustainability; Food; Feed production; Circular economy; Life cycle assessment; R&D; Challenges; Ex-ante LCA; Simplified LCA (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2023
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DOI: 10.1007/s10669-022-09874-y
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