4.7 Article

Integrated biorefinery approach to valorize citrus waste: A sustainable solution for resource recovery and environmental management

Journal

CHEMOSPHERE
Volume 293, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemosphere.2021.133459

Keywords

Citrus waste; Environmental pollution; Bioproducts; Waste management; Biorefinery; High-value products

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia [CVU: 735340]

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Citrus waste, which accounts for a large proportion of total fruit weight, has the potential to be utilized for the production of value-added products. Recent research has focused on the integrated biorefinery approach to extract essential oils, carotenoids, pectin, dietary fibers, and polyphenols from citrus waste, thereby optimizing the development of green waste for sustainability and economic benefits.
Citrus fruits are extensively cultivated, consumed and major processed horticulture crops around the globe. High processing and consumption generate huge quantities of solid organic wastes. Citrus waste represents approximately 40-50% of total fruit weight, which consists of rag (membranes and cores), pulp, seeds, and peel (albedo and flavedo), which are a potential source of value-added products including essential oils, carotenoids, pectin, dietary fibers, and polyphenols biofuel, etc. However, waste produced is discarded as waste in the environment, which causes a serious threat due to the presence of bioactive compounds. Recent research strategies on the integrated biorefinery approach explore various ways to utilize the waste obtained from the citrus wastes for their subsequent recovery of value-added products. Moreover, the citrus waste can be turned into various bioproducts, viz., enzymes, biofuels, and biopolymers using the integrated biorefinery approach, which can optimize the development of green waste for sustainability and economic benefits. Given the sustainable solution for resource recovery and environmental management, the article reviews the latest advances in the novel valorization approach and valuation of the existing state-of-the-art green technologies for citrus waste utilization to bring a sustainable solution for increasing demand for food, fuel, and energy security. To achieve the zero-waste approach and industrial viability, more efforts should be given to scale-up green recovery techniques along with diverse product profiling.

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