Bioresource Technology, Vol.248, 156-173, 2018
Life cycle assessment to compare the environmental impact of seven contemporary food waste management systems
Municipal food waste (FW) represents 35-45% of household residual waste in Australia, with the nation generating 1.6 Tg annually. It is estimated that 91% of this FW ends up in landfill. This study used life cycle assessment to determine and compare the environmental impact of seven contemporary FW management systems for two real-life jurisdictions; incorporating the complete waste service and expanding the system to include inert and garden waste. Although, no system exhibited a best ranking across all impact categories, FW digestion based systems were all revealed to have a lower global warming potential than composting and landfilling systems. Mechanical biological treatment, anaerobic co-digestion, and home composting all demonstrated the lowest environmental impacts for two or more of the environmental impact categories assessed. The assessment included market and technological specific variables and uncertainties providing a framework for robust decision making at a municipality level. Crown Copyright (C) 2017 Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Keywords:Food waste;Organic fraction of municipal solid waste;Life cycle assessment;Anaerobic digestion;Global warming