Funded under the National Recovery and Resilience Plan (NRRP), Mission 4 Component 2 Investment 1.3, Theme 10.
Multidisciplinary food supply chain (FSC) & waste management knowledge inventory. A repository of knowledge and primary/secondary data for the classification and modelling of issues related to (1) waste management and reduction in food and packaging supply chain (FPSC), (2) user-friendly data analysis and visualisation, (3) development of innovative digital technology solutions for the benefit of all stakeholders including final consumer. The Product Lifecycle Management (PLM) paradigm will be used. The adoption of instruments enabling regular food waste measurement will be investigated (in connection with Spoke 1).
Novel multi-disciplinary ontology framework for circular food & packaging supply chain and production (M12).
Innovative dashboard for a multi-disciplinary and multi-objective analysis and assessment of food & packaging supply chain (M12).
Scalable data collection infrastructure based on open-source technologies for waste management and reduction (M12).
Selection of case studies and applications for primary data collection (M14).
Results of food waste quantification in retail and food service segments (M18).
Every year, 5 Millions tons of Fresh Tuna are caught worldwide. Due to the different methodologies across geographical areas in handling this resource along the production- chain vast waste of resources is happening (Jensen et al., DTU Management 2009), (Asche et al., World Trade Report 2010). As an example, there are no current Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) set for the fish industry as for fish cleaning (Cato, FAO Fisheries Department 1998). This allows differences in resource’s handling which are linked to traditional and cultural heritage that may lead to inefficiencies. Consequently, this ends up in waste of material that could potentially being used. As of today, just the 41% of a caught Tuna can be used for human consumption as canned product while a large room for improvement can be foreseen (De Silva, FAO 2011). The main hurdle for improvement in efficiency and waste reduction is there is no current mapping of procedures used in production-chain in the different world sites (Benjamin et al., Fisherman’s news 2001). Therefore, in order to maximize the usage of resources these are possibly the key challenges we have to face to facilitate transformation: