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Environmental comparison of food-packaging systems: the significance of shelf-life extension

Abstract: Consumer-level food waste has considerable environmental consequences and is related to packaging and its impact on product shelf life. This study uses the life cycle assessment methodology to compare food packaging systems with similar or varying shelf life. When comparing packaging with different shelf life, estimating food waste from retail to consumer related to shelf life becomes crucial. Currently, no validated models exist for this purpose, and this paper contributes, for the first time, to a critical comparison of existing models. Key findings from a case study on chicken meat packaging reveal that extending the shelf life from 6 to 15 days in a PET tray, employing a modified atmosphere (with the highest packaging-to-food ratio), led to an average reduction in food waste from 47% to 15% of the total chicken meat produced at the slaughterhouse, consequently reducing Climate Change by approximately 78%. The range of food waste estimate was 24-66% using 5 different models. Despite this variation, a sensitivity analysis demonstrates that the comparison results remain consistent, emphasising the significance of food waste in the environmental impact. This underscores the crucial need for a validated method to assess food waste based on shelf life in food packaging ecodesign.

 Authorship: Tetteh H., Balcells M., Sazdovski I., Fullana-i-Palmer P., Margallo M., Aldaco R., Puig R.,

 Fuente: Cleaner Environmental Systems, 2024, 13, 100197

 Publisher: Elsevier

 Publication date: 01/06/2024

 No. of pages: 12

 Publication type: Article

 DOI: 10.1016/j.cesys.2024.100197

 ISSN: 2666-7894

 Spanish project: PID 2019-104925RB-C32

 Publication Url: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cesys.2024.100197

Authorship

TETTEH, HARRISON

BALCELLS FLUVIÀ, MERCÈ

SAZDOVSKI, ILIJA

PERE FULLANA I PALMER

RITA PUIG VIDAL