Back to Search Start Over

Local circular economy: BSF insect rearing in the Italian Agri-Food Industry.

Authors :
Cattaneo, Arianna
Meneguz, Marco
Dabbou, Sihem
Tambone, Fulvia
Scaglia, Barbara
Source :
Waste Management. Apr2024, Vol. 179, p234-244. 11p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

[Display omitted] • Insect rearing is as innovative way to face agri-food by-products management. • Biomass valorisation and creation of new value for feed and agricultural sector. • Building local industrial symbiosis among food and insect producers. • Possibility to adapt insect-based methodological approach for different areas. With a growing population, both food and waste production will increase. There is an urgent need for innovative ways of valorizing waste. The black soldier fly (Hermetia illucens L.) efficiently converts agri-food by-products (BPs) into high-quality materials; its rearing process yields larvae (BSFL) rich in fat and protein for feed purposes, with "frass" acting as organic fertilizer. While the insect rearing sector is expanding, few producers use BPs. Therefore, a case study approach was adopted to evaluate the potential for establishing an Italian BSFL production plant on BPs available on the territory. After contacting more than 115 agri-food companies (maximum 100 km from the BSFL plant), they were classified based on sector, distance, size, and BPs (quantity, seasonality, management). BPs with a low value (fruit and vegetable residues) were treated as waste, associated with costs and low valorization. By merging the available BPs on the territory and following the literature on BSFL nutritional needs' two diets (Scenario BSFL) were created, assessing their suitability comparing them to the current full-scale plant diet (Scenario 0). The exploitation of BPs for BSFL rearing reduced local waste production by 52 % compared to conventional composting (Scenario 0). In addition, integrating BPs into the larval feed formulation increased BSFL production value (+47 times). These results highlight the potential of locally-based insect rearing to valorize BPs and create a network of sustainable actors within the agri-food industry. Further investigations are needed to improve the connection between agri-food and insect industrial activities, expanding this framework to other regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0956053X
Volume :
179
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Waste Management
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
176229666
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wasman.2024.03.016