Recent findings on environmental sustainability and conversion efficiency of waste-to-protein pathways
Open access
Date
2023-06Type
- Review Article
Abstract
Research on the environmental sustainability and nutrient conversion efficiency of bioconversion technologies applied in waste-to-protein pathways is relevant from an early development stage on to identify optimal applications. This review summarizes the recent advances and remaining issues in this emerging research field. While black soldier fly larvae (BSFL) have been intensively studied, various other technologies such as other insect species, bacteria, fungi, microalgae, and worms, are currently underrepresented. Regarding environmental sustainability, which is mainly studied through life cycle assessment, the choice of functional unit is highly relevant for overall outcomes and comparability. Additionally, decisions on the burden of input materials and process substitution strongly influence the overall results. Substrates composed of different residual biomass streams strongly influence the process efficiency of BSFL, which is commonly expressed in feed conversion and protein efficiency rates. In contrast, residual biomass type, protein content, and amino acid profile are of minor importance for the protein composition of BSFL. Overall, the large variability of residual biomass types and bioconversion technologies necessitates better methodological alignment to produce comparable results across studies that collectively support decision-making. Show more
Permanent link
https://doi.org/10.3929/ethz-b-000612034Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Current Opinion in Green and Sustainable ChemistryVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
ElsevierSubject
Waste-to-nutrition; Alternative protein; Bioconversion; Circular economy; Black soldier fly larvaeOrganisational unit
09571 - Mathys, Alexander / Mathys, Alexander
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