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Feeding food losses and waste to pigs and poultry: Implications for feed quality and production

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 378, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2022.134623

Keywords

Food leftovers; Swill; Feed characteristics; Nutrition; Livestock diets; Circular food systems

Funding

  1. ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality through the Knowledge base Program 40: Connected circularity [KB-40-005-012]

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Feeding food losses and food waste (FLW) to livestock can reduce environmental impact in livestock production, but there are challenges in terms of feed quality and production systems. Mixing different FLW streams can address variability in nutritional value and physical characteristics, but more research is needed. The scale, location, and infrastructure for processing FLW are important factors. Transitioning to a sustainable and circular food system through increased use of FLW requires a trade-off between costs and benefits.
Feeding food losses and food waste (FLW) to livestock can reduce the environmental impact of livestock pro-duction, but practical implications for feed quality and feed production systems are currently unclear. The aim of this paper is to address the potential implications for pigs and poultry feeding systems when FLW would (fully or partly) replace conventional ingredients of animal feed within the European Union. FLW streams, such as (prohibited) animal-based foods or household waste, constitute a substantial and valuable part of available FLW. Feeding FLW, however, also includes challenges regarding the (anti-) nutritional value, physical and sensory characteristics, and contamination risks of animal feed. Mixing various FLW streams can be a solution for the large variability in nutritional value and physical characteristics, but more knowledge is needed about the various properties of FLW streams, best handling and processing methods, validated analysis techniques and inclusion levels in animal feeds. We discuss the scale and location of processing FLW, as well as the required infrastructure for dealing with supply and demand. Different approaches may be taken to increase the use of FLW into livestock diets and transition into a sustainable and circular food system. How this could be best imple-mented will likely be a trade-off between costs and benefits. It should be discussed both among direct users and within the wider society which costs and risks are acceptable.

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