Register now or Login here!
Email Address
Password
Remember me? []
 
Home
Scan
Plan
Act
Network
 
Newsletter Archive
Insight Newsletter 23 July 2008
Edited by Bruce Lloyd
Trend Alert: Food - Want not, Waste Not

LandfillDavid Taylor, Strategic Futures Analyst, Collaborative Connections

Food, which has largely been taken for granted in the developed world over the last few decades, is now a major global talking point, and not just because of the rising price of it. New technology is currently being commercialised to make sure that food which is not wanted, is no longer wasted.

What is changing?

Gordon Brown recently announced a campaign to help reduce Britain's waste food mountains as reports of food riots in the developing world, and rising food prices in the West have begun to weigh on consumer consciences and pockets. As part of this campaign, supermarkets will be urged to drop "three for two" deals on food that encourage shoppers into bulk-buying more than they need, often leading to the surpluses being thrown away. Gordon Brown postulated that "unnecessary" purchases were contributing to price rises, and urged people to plan meals in advance and store food properly.

Wasteful consumption notwithstanding, campaigners have pointed a larger finger at another culprit - the increasing use of biofuels in the world’s largest economies. According to an unpublished World Bank study, the EU and US drive towards biofuels is having a massive impact on both food supply and prices, and have caused a 75 per cent increase in food prices.

But researchers may have found a solution to the cleaner energy, cheaper food conundrum by using two kinds of bacteria to produce hydrogen from food waste. Researchers have combined the efforts of two kinds of bacteria to produce hydrogen in a bioreactor and the use of a more advanced disposal system could mean that mountains of food waste can now be turned into valuable energy in the form of "biohydrogen". Two companies, Biowaste2energy Ltd and Ineos Bio, are both looking into commercially exploiting this technology.

Why is this important?

Research into using bacteria to produce hydrogen has been revived thanks to the rising profile of energy issues, with hydrogen having three times more potential energy by weight than petrol, making it the highest energy-content fuel available. With nearly 7 million tonnes of food going to waste in the UK alone every year, a bioreactor disposal system could not only reduce the green house gases produced by landfills, but also produce the much cleaner hydrogen. According to researchers, with a more advanced pre-treatment, biohydrogen can even be produced from the waste from food-crop cultivation, such as corn stalks and husks - millions of tonnes of which are produced each year.

For the producers of hydrogen cars this may mean cheaper bio-hydrogen which could result in a massive boom in clean transport, reducing the need for biofuels, increasing the proportion of food crops and therefore bringing prices down… hypothetically. What is more certain is that diverting bio-waste from landfill into biohydrogen production addresses both climate change and energy security, and in so doing, creating a much more efficient "cradle to cradle" process.

Using this Trend Alert: A six-step guide

Want to contribute a Trend Alert?
Please email Kerry Richardson if you would like to contribute a Trend Alert on foresight, strategic thinking or change management and earn money from publishing your full briefings.

Want to re-publish this Trend Alert?
We give our permission for anyone to republish this Alert on the following conditions:

  • that you fully adhere to our copyright policies. See our Terms & Conditions (see para 2.).
  • that you link the re-published article to the original article
  • that you reproduce the Alert as it first appeared with no changes of any kind.

Latest Insights

Every week we add many new insights to Shaping Tomorrow. We offer a hand-picked selection of resources, reports and publications from commercial organisations, government agencies, NGOs, think tanks and other public interest organizations. Our aim is to alert you to upcoming changes from which you can explore issues of interest further.

By viewing the new insights you can anticipate how tomorrow will be different for you and your organisation.

Only Shaping Tomorrow members can regularly access the full database. Membership costs just 95 British Pounds (+17.5% tax for those based in the European Union), or $189 in the United States. You can pay using one of many credit cards directly at our web site.

Why put yourself at a disadvantage to our 13,771 members and your competition when you can join today; you won't find a more comprehensive trends service at such low cost anywhere!

&

 

Tell a friend

If you like what you see here and want to help us grow our services and value to you, then please recommend your friends, associates and colleagues.

We operate a no spamming policy and we guarantee not to divulge your or their details to anyone. Your recommendation will go straight to them and not be viewed by us.

The only message they will receive is from you, saying:

"I think you may be interested in this Web site"

Please click here to tell a friend.


Last Updated: 18 May 2013
Powered By: Shaping Tomorrow since 2002