Food waste biorefinery towards circular economy in Australia

[Display omitted] •Food waste generation, management, and legislation in Australia is reviewed.•Major Australian food waste streams and their biorefinery potential was evaluated.•Biorefineries from major food waste streams for circular economy are discussed.•Existing food waste conversion initiative...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioresource technology 2023-11, Vol.388, p.129761-129761, Article 129761
Hauptverfasser: Talekar, Sachin, Ekanayake, Krishmali, Holland, Brendan, Barrow, Colin
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Food waste generation, management, and legislation in Australia is reviewed.•Major Australian food waste streams and their biorefinery potential was evaluated.•Biorefineries from major food waste streams for circular economy are discussed.•Existing food waste conversion initiatives and future research areas are provided. Staggering amounts of food waste are produced in Australia, and this review provides food waste based biorefinery opportunities in moving towards a circular economy in Australia. The current food waste scenario in Australia including an overview of primary food waste sources, government regulation, and current management practices is presented. The major food waste streams include fruit and vegetable (waste from wine grapes, citrus, apple, potato, and tomato), nuts (almond processing waste), seafood (Fish waste), dairy whey, sugarcane bagasse, and household and businesses. The composition of these waste streams indicated their potential for use in biorefineries to produce value-added products via various pathways combining direct extraction and biological and thermochemical conversion. Finally, the efforts made in Australia to utilize food waste as a resource, as well as the challenges and future directions to promote the development of concrete and commercially viable technologies for food waste biorefinery, are described.
ISSN:0960-8524
1873-2976
DOI:10.1016/j.biortech.2023.129761