ROOTS - Circular policies for changing the biowaste system
- PMID: 37645487
- PMCID: PMC10446026
- DOI: 10.12688/openreseurope.15507.1
ROOTS - Circular policies for changing the biowaste system
Abstract
The circular economy has a huge potential to make our societies more sustainable and decarbonised, with a reduced impact on the planet's resources. The deployment of innovative solutions in the field of urban biowaste valorisation and reuse is still hindered by numerous bottlenecks, such as technological readiness, funding and financing tools availability, quality and quantity of biowaste and regulatory barriers. The European Green Deal and associated legislative initiatives provide the opportunity to overcome the last ones. To promote innovative solutions for the European circular bioeconomy and help to overcome the barriers for the deployment of a circular bioeconomy, five Horizon 2020 projects working on biowaste valorisation have teamed up. This joint initiative is named ROOTS - circulaR pOlicies for changing the biOwasTe System. The projects HOOP, VALUEWASTE, SCALIBUR, WaysTUP! and CITYLOOPS are piloting new solutions to transform urban biowaste (food waste and green waste) and wastewater into valuable products like feed, fertilisers, bioplastics, biopesticides, proteins and bioethanol. They use different processes and technologies, but they all rely on high levels of recycling/upcycling and propose valorisation solutions relevant to the uptake of a truly circular bioeconomy. As a result of the work performed and experience acquired, a number of bottlenecks have been identified, on the following topics: biowaste prevention, recycling targets and treatment plants, waste and by-products, biopesticides, insects for animal feed, single cell protein, citizen behaviour, investment needs. For each identified bottleneck, this open letter proposes specifically 1) policy recommendations for each level of governance, and 2) information about solutions, good practices and concrete experiences from the participating projects.
Keywords: animal feed; biopesticides; biowaste; by-products; circular bioeconomy; circular cities and regions; circular economy; insects; investment; protein; recycling; single cell protein; waste.
Copyright: © 2023 Suárez MÁ et al.
Conflict of interest statement
No competing interests were disclosed.
References
-
- CEN-CENELEC: CEN Workshop Agreement Key factors for the successful implementation of urban biowaste selective collection schemes.2022; Last accessed: 18/11/2022. Reference Source
-
- European Environment Agency (EEA): Bio-waste in Europe - turning challenges into opportunities.2020; Last accessed: 18/11/2022. Reference Source
-
- European Environment Agency (EEA): Reaching 2030’s residual municipal waste target — why recycling is not enough.2022; Last accessed: 18/11/2022. Reference Source
-
- European Union: Waste framework directive 2008/98. Last accessed: 18/11/2022. Reference Source
-
- European Union, a: Regulation No. 767/2009 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 13 July 2009 on the placing on the market and use of feed, amending European Parliament and Council Regulation (EC) No 1831/2003 and repealing Council Directive 79/373/EEC, Commission Directive 80/511/EEC, Council Directives 82/471/EEC, 83/228/EEC, 93/74/EEC, 93/113/EC and 96/25/EC and Commission Decision 2004/217/EC. Reference Source
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Research Materials