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A Waste of Food-Waste Bags

Bergwall, Julia LU (2023) In Student thesis series INES NGEK01 20231
Dept of Physical Geography and Ecosystem Science
Abstract
It is estimated that the average Swede throws away 61 kg of food waste annually. The more food waste there is, the more food waste bags are required. Since the implementation of a tax on thin plastic bags, grocery stores have been providing fruit bags of paper as an eco-friendly alternative. This study examines the current usage of paper fruit bags in the municipality of Helsingborg and explores the potential for reusing them for food waste. Reusing fruit bags for food waste would minimise the waste of this type of bag and reduce the need for manufacturing additional bags, thereby conserving renewable resources. However, the municipality treats the food waste through anaerobic digestion to produce a certified digestate. This certification... (More)
It is estimated that the average Swede throws away 61 kg of food waste annually. The more food waste there is, the more food waste bags are required. Since the implementation of a tax on thin plastic bags, grocery stores have been providing fruit bags of paper as an eco-friendly alternative. This study examines the current usage of paper fruit bags in the municipality of Helsingborg and explores the potential for reusing them for food waste. Reusing fruit bags for food waste would minimise the waste of this type of bag and reduce the need for manufacturing additional bags, thereby conserving renewable resources. However, the municipality treats the food waste through anaerobic digestion to produce a certified digestate. This certification scheme has specific requirements on the type of food waste bags that can be used to minimise contaminants. The local waste company therefore insists on using only their designated food waste bags.
The results of this study indicate that a total amount of approximately 4.3 million fruit bags is discarded annually in the municipality of Helsingborg after been used for groceries. Furthermore, 32% of households already use fruit bags for food waste. Additionally, 28% of the municipality's grocery stores offer fruit bags that are approved for food waste according to the digestate certification scheme. Biond, the digestate producer, prefers the utilisation of paper bags since plastic and bioplastic do not degrade during the digestion and is instead sorted out as much as feasible. Future studies should include testing occurrence of contaminants in fruit bags approved according to the EU regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 under what is considered normal and foreseeable conditions for fruit bags. Furthermore, it is of interest to investigate the effect of digestion on organic pollutants and the effect of these contaminants on soils. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Bergwall, Julia LU
supervisor
organization
course
NGEK01 20231
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Anaerobic digestion, Food waste, SPCR 120, Fruit bag, Helsingborg municipality, Waste management
publication/series
Student thesis series INES
report number
589
language
English
id
9125871
date added to LUP
2023-06-16 10:57:01
date last changed
2023-06-16 10:57:01
@misc{9125871,
  abstract     = {{It is estimated that the average Swede throws away 61 kg of food waste annually. The more food waste there is, the more food waste bags are required. Since the implementation of a tax on thin plastic bags, grocery stores have been providing fruit bags of paper as an eco-friendly alternative. This study examines the current usage of paper fruit bags in the municipality of Helsingborg and explores the potential for reusing them for food waste. Reusing fruit bags for food waste would minimise the waste of this type of bag and reduce the need for manufacturing additional bags, thereby conserving renewable resources. However, the municipality treats the food waste through anaerobic digestion to produce a certified digestate. This certification scheme has specific requirements on the type of food waste bags that can be used to minimise contaminants. The local waste company therefore insists on using only their designated food waste bags.
The results of this study indicate that a total amount of approximately 4.3 million fruit bags is discarded annually in the municipality of Helsingborg after been used for groceries. Furthermore, 32% of households already use fruit bags for food waste. Additionally, 28% of the municipality's grocery stores offer fruit bags that are approved for food waste according to the digestate certification scheme. Biond, the digestate producer, prefers the utilisation of paper bags since plastic and bioplastic do not degrade during the digestion and is instead sorted out as much as feasible. Future studies should include testing occurrence of contaminants in fruit bags approved according to the EU regulation (EC) No 1935/2004 under what is considered normal and foreseeable conditions for fruit bags. Furthermore, it is of interest to investigate the effect of digestion on organic pollutants and the effect of these contaminants on soils.}},
  author       = {{Bergwall, Julia}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{Student thesis series INES}},
  title        = {{A Waste of Food-Waste Bags}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}