Life cycle assessment of California processing tomato: an evaluation of the effects of evolving practices and technologies over a 10-year (2005–2015) timeframe

Author:

Winans Kiara,Brodt Sonja,Kendall Alissa

Abstract

Abstract Purpose California is the largest US producer of processing tomatoes, generating 96% of all domestic production and nearly 30% of global supply. Processing tomatoes are mostly processed into diced and paste products. Consumers and actors along their supply chains are increasingly interested in understanding their environmental burdens and identifying opportunities for improvements. This study applies life cycle assessment (LCA) to California diced and paste products over a 10-year timeframe to characterize current impacts and historical trends. Methods The LCA considers a scope from cradle-to-processing facility gate and accords with relevant Product Category Rules as published by the International EPD® System. Extensive primary data were collected for tomato cultivation for the years 2005 and 2015, and from processing facilities for 2005, 2010, and 2015 to understand the effects of evolving practices and technologies. We estimate crop and regional specific nitrous oxide and nitrate leaching emissions using a biogeochemical model, and the USES-LCA model is used to determine potential impacts from pesticide application. A suite of impact assessment categories is included based on the CML method (only global warming potential and freshwater consumption values are in the abstract). Results and discussion The 2015 results of the study indicate that diced tomatoes are responsible for 0.16 kg CO2e and 71 L of freshwater per kg, and paste is responsible for 0.83 kg CO2e and 328 L of freshwater per kg. The main opportunities for improvement include natural gas use in the greenhouse phase, energy for irrigation pumping and fertilizer type in the cultivation phase, and natural gas and electricity use in the facility processing phase. These hotspots are consistent with studies of processing tomato in other parts of the world. Evaluating trends over time showed that technological improvements in the industry had reduced life cycle impacts; for example, global warming potential decreased by 12% for paste and 26% for diced products between 2005 and 2015. Conclusions Trends over time show increasing efficiency at the cultivation and processing facility stages that have led to reductions in all impact categories evaluated. However, additional opportunities exist beyond efficiency improvements. Fertilizer and pesticide choice are potential opportunities for further reducing impacts. Also, the introduction of renewables in each phase of the supply chain (solar-powered irrigation pumps and onsite solar energy generation for facilities) could reduce the overall supply chain GWP100 impacts by 9–10%.

Funder

Barilla

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Environmental Science

Reference34 articles.

1. Amón R, Simmons C (2016) Energy use and efficiency opportunities in industrial tomato processing. In: XIV intern symp process tomato, vol 1159, pp 143–150

2. Benmehaia A, Brabez F, Benharrath O (2017) Production contract performance in tomato processing industry: analysis of Algerian case. Int J Food Ag Econ 5(2):97

3. Brodt S, Kramer KJ, Kendall A, Feenstra G (2013) Comparing environmental impacts of regional and national-scale food supply chains: a case study of processed tomatoes. Food Policy 42:106–114

4. California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) (2016) The United States Department of Agricultural National Agricultural Statistics Service (USDA NASS) California Processing Tomato Report. https://nass.usda.gov/Statistics_by_State/California/Publications/Vegetables/2016/201605ptom.pdf. Accessed December 2016

5. California Department of Pesticide Regulation (CDPR) (2018) Pesticide use reporting (for 2005 and 2015). https://www.cdpr.ca.gov. Accessed August 2015

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