When does upcycling mitigate climate change? The case of wet spent grains and fruit and vegetable residues in Canada

Author:

Jain Sourabh1ORCID,Gualandris Jury1

Affiliation:

1. Ivey Business School University of Western Ontario London Canada

Abstract

AbstractWe investigate when upcycling—defined as treating food by‐products for human consumption—mitigates climate change. Earlier research only modeled pilot‐scale upcycling experiments, which discount its real‐world complexity. To tackle this important limitation, our research involved 130 interviews, life cycle assessment, and a simulation to assess what operational structures made upcycling environmentally sustainable and superior to alternatives such as animal feeding, anaerobic digestion, composting, and landfilling. We considered wet spent grains and fruit and vegetable residues in Canada, two important streams of unavoidable residuals in Western food systems. First, we found that the simulated range of greenhouse gas impacts, +938 to −465 kg of CO2 eq. emissions per tonne of upcycled material, was more optimistic than the ranges available in the literature. No previous estimates existed for the range of impacts for real cases, −18 and −300 kg of CO2 eq. emissions per tonne of upcycled material. Second, net‐negative carbon impacts were achieved only by operational structures with a technological configuration characterized by a total energy consumption lower than 1500 kWh per tonne of upcycled materials and a geographical scale inferior to 260 km (from point of collection to point of sale). Most of the real cases identified during our fieldwork matched these operational prescriptions and achieved a carbon footprint up to 25% smaller than the carbon footprint of the substituted virgin products. Third, our analysis of both best‐case simulated performance and real performance suggested that the positive carbon impact of upcycling was roughly comparable with that produced by animal feeding and anaerobic digestion, but superior to composting and landfilling. Our study illuminates the anatomy of environmentally sustainable upcycling operations and problematizes emergent food recovery hierarchies.

Funder

Mitacs

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Social Sciences,General Environmental Science

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