Litcius/Paper detail

From Waste to Plate: Exploring the Impact of Food Waste Valorisation on Achieving Zero Hunger

Rose Daphnee Tchonkouang, Helen Onyeaka, Taghi Miri

2023Sustainability46 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Hunger (811 million people, 2020) and food waste (931 million tonnes annually, 2020) are long-standing interconnected challenges that have plagued humankind for centuries. Food waste originates from various sources, including consumption habits and failures within the food supply chain. Given the growing concerns regarding food insecurity, malnutrition, and hunger, there is a pressing need to recover and repurpose as much food waste as possible. A growing body of knowledge identifies the valorisation (including upcycling) of food waste as one of the strategies to fight hunger by positively impacting food availability and food security. This paper evaluates the potential role of food waste valorisation, including upcycling, in reducing global hunger. A literature search was conducted to examine how converting food waste into value-added products, such as food formulations and farming inputs, can contribute to increasing food availability. The benefits of waste-to-food operations in improving food availability through producing food ingredients and products from materials that would have been wasted or discarded otherwise were discussed.

Topics & Concepts

Food wasteValorisationFood securityBusinessAgricultureZero wasteFood processingMalnutritionFood packagingFood industryFood systemsWaste managementAgricultural economicsNatural resource economicsEngineeringEconomic growthGeographyFood scienceEconomicsMechanical engineeringChemistryArchaeologyFood Waste Reduction and SustainabilityUrban Agriculture and SustainabilityMunicipal Solid Waste Management