Carbon Footprint Analysis of Dairy Food Waste: Farm-To-Fork Life Cycle Based Assessment along Dairy Value Chain
Abstract
Reducing the agricultural industry's carbon footprint is a severe challenge, as
around a third of the produced food is wasted along the supply chain globally. Despite
attempts to reduce carbon emissions from the agri-food system, agriculture contributes
significantly to Greenhouse Gas (GHG) emissions, with approximately 51 billion tons
of carbon dioxide equivalent globally. Although ruminant animals are a primary source
of meat and dairy products, livestock's supply chain, including their wastes, releases a
considerable greenhouse gas such as methane, nitrous oxide, and carbon dioxide. The
presented paper starts with bringing up a mini literature review on several methods for
quantifying food waste, assessing the environmental impact of food waste, identifying
the potential stages along the food supply chain, and providing circular food economy
findings for reducing the emissions released from the food waste globally. The study
has emphasized that food waste in mass does not necessarily indicate the food waste related impact. Although animal-containing products have relatively low waste in terms
of mass, they have a significant food waste-related impact explicitly in global warming
potential (Kg C02 eq). The results reveal that milk is the top dairy product responsible
for the wastage of dairy products in terms of mass and wastage Carbon Footprint (CF).
The consumption stage accounted for nearly 50% of dairy food waste in terms of mass.
The primary production stage is responsible for most of the dairy sector's carbon
intensity from farm-to-fork life cycle assessment. The study explains the reason why
animal-containing food waste carbon intensity gets exacerbated in the primary
production chain. Although the wastage carbon footprinting varies among different
geographical locations, the United States dominated the top wastage dairy emissions,
followed by United Kingdom, Turkey, Slovak Republic, and Germany. Further policy
recommendations have been suggested to mitigate the impact of dairy food waste
emissions eventually. The paper attempts to support strategic decision-making towards
the transition to a sustainable food supply chain in the dairy sector to mitigate food
waste challenges ultimately
DOI/handle
http://hdl.handle.net/10576/22126Collections
- Engineering Management [131 items ]