Feds fund a push to reduce garbage
By Rich Kiley
With the United States moving toward an ambitious goal of halving food waste by 2030, a new $15 million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) will be used to establish the first national academic research network, including RIT, on wasted food in the United States.
With
the United States moving toward an ambitious goal of halving food waste by 2030, a new $15
million grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF)
will be used to establish the first national academic research network on
wasted food in the United States.
Under
the grant, researchers from American University will lead 13 other institutions
in a five-year project aiming to deepen understanding of how the causes of
wasted food are interconnected and how they intersect with other regional
systems beyond food. Researchers will take a systems approach to improving data
on wasted food, with the goal of designing and strengthening sustainable
solutions to reducing food waste.
“Our research will
re-envision wasted food as a valuable resource as it relates
to the circular economy,” Babbitt said. “RIT will
collaborate with business and industry partners to explore
and create solutions that maximize the healthy, nutritious food used to
feed people, minimize costly inefficiencies, and recycle unavoidable wastes
into bio-based products and clean energy that powers the regional economy.”
Additional
researchers for RIT’s $1.8 million part of the project include Christy Tyler, Thomas Trabold, Kaitlin Stack Whitney, Nathan Eddingsaas, and Todd Pagano.
Rochester-area
partners include the New York State Pollution Prevention Institute, Wegmans
Food Markets, Biomass Controls, CH4
Biogas, R.L. Jeffres & Sons, Monroe County Department of Environmental Services, Natural Upcycling, and OWARECO, LLC. The project collaborators
will provide data and information on regional food system challenges and work
with the network to create solutions that reduce and recycle food waste and
contribute to economic growth.
According
to Babbitt, RIT’s focus will build on current NSF food waste research and an
NSF-funded workshop the university held in 2019.
Researchers will study new technologies for recovering the energy, water, and
nutrients contained in food waste in a circular economy framework, she added.
“We
are studying their overall performance, economics, and ecological footprint,”
Babbitt noted. “One issue, for example, involves food waste mixed with
packaging, which is a contaminant during recovery. Some technologies can
co-process both. But that might lead to micro-plastic releases to local
ecosystems, which builds on Christy Tyler’s work on plastics in the
environment.”
The five-year project will engage
communities in California, and the Great Lakes, Mid-Atlantic, and Southeast
regions. In addition to RIT, research partners include the Maryland Institute College of Art,
World Wildlife Fund, University of Illinois-Urbana Champaign, University of
Albany, Louisiana State University, Pennington Biomedical Research Center,
Illinois Institute of Technology, Duke University, and University of
California-Davis.
The
NSF project includes work in the following areas and will engage communities
and frontline workers in food industries, as well as nonprofit,
government, and private-sector stakeholders:
Smarter data and predictive modeling. In the pursuit of efficiency and sustainability, inequitable decisions can occur, such as diverting low-quality foods to low-income neighborhoods. New math models can integrate data, take multiple factors into account and show the way to food systems solutions that balance sustainability, resilience, and equity outcomes.
Food rescue, a policy
action, will be evaluated for amount of food rescued, environmental quality,
population health, and equity outcomes. Environmental racism and equity when
matching rescued food to communities will be explored.
STEM
K–12 and post-secondary education. A general education course and open
educational resource, Wasted Food 101, and the first undergraduate student
science journal on food systems will be created. There will be a curriculum for
elementary school students, and partnerships with minority- and
disability-serving institutions will engage Black, deaf, and partially hearing
students in research experiences.
Strategies
to minimize household-level food waste. As consumer behavior plays a
role in wasted food, research will be conducted on wasted food prevention
campaigns in cities. Mapping trends and other digital tools will be used to
assess wasted food and design educational and social marketing campaigns aimed
at preventing waste and addressing the social determinants of health in
communities.
Study
new technologies on wasted food and their integration with regional
infrastructure. Technologies such as composting and anaerobic digestion are
leading options for wasted food management, but their adoption is limited.
The
project was awarded under NSF’s Sustainable Regional Systems Research Networks
program. NSF research networks create knowledge and solutions that enhance
sustainability, equity and resilience of regional systems in the United States.
To learn more, go to the Multiscale RECIPES for
Sustainable Food Systems website and follow @WastedFoodNtwk on Twitter.