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A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy

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A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy. / Do Nhu, Quynh; Ramudhin, Amar; Colicchia, Claudia et al.
In: International Journal of Production Economics, 30.09.2021.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Do Nhu, Q, Ramudhin, A, Colicchia, C, Creazza, A & Li, D 2021, 'A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy', International Journal of Production Economics. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209

APA

Do Nhu, Q., Ramudhin, A., Colicchia, C., Creazza, A., & Li, D. (2021). A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy. International Journal of Production Economics, Article 108209. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209

Vancouver

Do Nhu Q, Ramudhin A, Colicchia C, Creazza A, Li D. A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy. International Journal of Production Economics. 2021 Sept 30;108209. Epub 2021 Jun 18. doi: 10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209

Author

Do Nhu, Quynh ; Ramudhin, Amar ; Colicchia, Claudia et al. / A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy. In: International Journal of Production Economics. 2021.

Bibtex

@article{28527baa660e4107ba8effd1529c462f,
title = "A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy",
abstract = "Circular Economy (CE) aims to retain the maximum value of products and materials for a longer time in a closed-loop manner, thereby decoupling natural resource usage from economic growth. Food waste reduction is one of the top priorities under the recent European Union's CE Package. It also contributes to achieving the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 12.3). While food loss and waste (FLW) prevention and management are well-studied in the literature, research in CE is more recent. Through a systematic literature review, this study creates a taxonomy that synthesises the key aspects of FLW under the CE. 297 papers were reviewed and analysed using keyword co-occurrence analysis (KCN) and structural dimension analysis. In KCN, three research themes emerge: impact assessment, biorefinery, and nutrient recycling. Structural dimension analysis reveals the types of research methods, types of FLW flows, FLW prevention and management options with associated opportunities and challenges, and the sustainability impact assessment (SIA) addressed in the literature. A taxonomy is presented and future research directions are highlighted under six research streams: i) FLW supply and quantification, ii) practices and technological aspects, iii) logistics and supply chain management, iv) market demand, v) SIA, and vi) policy and legislation. Combining insights from CE and FLW prevention and management, the taxonomy helps key stakeholders, including industry practitioners to grasp new business opportunities, politicians to set up support strategies and strategic development plans, society to recognise the benefits of waste-oriented bioeconomy, and consumers to raise their awareness and be actively involved in CE.",
keywords = "Circular economy, Food waste management, Biorefinery, Sustainability, Waste reduction, Food redistribution",
author = "{Do Nhu}, Quynh and Amar Ramudhin and Claudia Colicchia and Alessandro Creazza and Dong Li",
year = "2021",
month = sep,
day = "30",
doi = "10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209",
language = "English",
journal = "International Journal of Production Economics",
issn = "0925-5273",
publisher = "Elsevier Science B.V.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A systematic review of research on food loss and waste prevention and management for the circular economy

AU - Do Nhu, Quynh

AU - Ramudhin, Amar

AU - Colicchia, Claudia

AU - Creazza, Alessandro

AU - Li, Dong

PY - 2021/9/30

Y1 - 2021/9/30

N2 - Circular Economy (CE) aims to retain the maximum value of products and materials for a longer time in a closed-loop manner, thereby decoupling natural resource usage from economic growth. Food waste reduction is one of the top priorities under the recent European Union's CE Package. It also contributes to achieving the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 12.3). While food loss and waste (FLW) prevention and management are well-studied in the literature, research in CE is more recent. Through a systematic literature review, this study creates a taxonomy that synthesises the key aspects of FLW under the CE. 297 papers were reviewed and analysed using keyword co-occurrence analysis (KCN) and structural dimension analysis. In KCN, three research themes emerge: impact assessment, biorefinery, and nutrient recycling. Structural dimension analysis reveals the types of research methods, types of FLW flows, FLW prevention and management options with associated opportunities and challenges, and the sustainability impact assessment (SIA) addressed in the literature. A taxonomy is presented and future research directions are highlighted under six research streams: i) FLW supply and quantification, ii) practices and technological aspects, iii) logistics and supply chain management, iv) market demand, v) SIA, and vi) policy and legislation. Combining insights from CE and FLW prevention and management, the taxonomy helps key stakeholders, including industry practitioners to grasp new business opportunities, politicians to set up support strategies and strategic development plans, society to recognise the benefits of waste-oriented bioeconomy, and consumers to raise their awareness and be actively involved in CE.

AB - Circular Economy (CE) aims to retain the maximum value of products and materials for a longer time in a closed-loop manner, thereby decoupling natural resource usage from economic growth. Food waste reduction is one of the top priorities under the recent European Union's CE Package. It also contributes to achieving the United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals (SDG 12.3). While food loss and waste (FLW) prevention and management are well-studied in the literature, research in CE is more recent. Through a systematic literature review, this study creates a taxonomy that synthesises the key aspects of FLW under the CE. 297 papers were reviewed and analysed using keyword co-occurrence analysis (KCN) and structural dimension analysis. In KCN, three research themes emerge: impact assessment, biorefinery, and nutrient recycling. Structural dimension analysis reveals the types of research methods, types of FLW flows, FLW prevention and management options with associated opportunities and challenges, and the sustainability impact assessment (SIA) addressed in the literature. A taxonomy is presented and future research directions are highlighted under six research streams: i) FLW supply and quantification, ii) practices and technological aspects, iii) logistics and supply chain management, iv) market demand, v) SIA, and vi) policy and legislation. Combining insights from CE and FLW prevention and management, the taxonomy helps key stakeholders, including industry practitioners to grasp new business opportunities, politicians to set up support strategies and strategic development plans, society to recognise the benefits of waste-oriented bioeconomy, and consumers to raise their awareness and be actively involved in CE.

KW - Circular economy

KW - Food waste management

KW - Biorefinery

KW - Sustainability

KW - Waste reduction

KW - Food redistribution

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209

DO - 10.1016/j.ijpe.2021.108209

M3 - Journal article

JO - International Journal of Production Economics

JF - International Journal of Production Economics

SN - 0925-5273

M1 - 108209

ER -