Policies and tools for the bio-nutrient circular economy - Bio-nutrient circular economy seminar
CHALLENGES IN BIO-ECONOMY
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Transcript of CHALLENGES IN BIO-ECONOMY
CHALLENGES IN BIO-ECONOMY
increasing societal demand for more sustainable and efficient resource use in the agricultural and fisheries industry only part of qualitative product is valorised lots of by-products with low-value applications often linear unidisciplinary science-driven innovation approach followed failure to market inventions due to unanticipated bottlenecks
The GeNeSys project combines the above challenges in both a methodological and a thematic objective
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METHODOLOGICAL OBJECTIVETo devise instruments that support
the development of successful system innovations
THEMATIC OBJECTIVETo optimise the valorisation of animal and plant by-products
[email protected] www.ilvogenesys.be
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• Improve soil organic matter and soil quality and at the same time avoid nutrient leaching• Improve closure of nutrient and material cycles and decrease the dependency on external inputs (mineral fertilizer,
pesticides, cultivation substrate, …) without considerably increasing costs
Challenges in agriculture
Outstanding, high quality designer compost is part of the solution because:• Part of the biomass and nutrients are recycled more efficient use of production resources• Compost characteristics fit the expectations of the end-user• Compost contributes to the supply of effective organic matter• Nutrients in compost are released slowly prevents nutrient leaching• The mix of organisms in compost improves soil in biological terms• Long term application of compost can improve the disease resistance of the soil• High temperatures during the process suppresses weed seeds and germs
But despite the numerous advantages:• Diversity and availability of feedstock and varying composting circumstances • Shortage in fibre-rich materials due to high demand for energy• Logistic & institutional limitations• Economic feasibility?
Aim: Development of qualitatively outstanding, economically feasible compost products for various applications in agriculture and horticulture in Flanders• Transdisciplinary and participatory research involving all relevant stakeholder groups (farmers, horticulturists,
compost sector, nature sector, scientists, policymakers, etc.)• Possibilities to incorporate underutilized, often more difficult, ‘green’ by-products from vegetables, discards,
manure• Possibilities to cooperate with nature-management sector for ‘brown’ by-products (wood chips, clippings, sod
cuttings, …)
GeNeSys: Use of By-Products as System Innovation
The brown gold: valorisation pathway through composting
Viaene J., Reubens B., Vandecasteele B., Willekens K., De Neve S.Institute for Agricultural and Fisheries Research (ILVO), Burg. Van Gansberghelaan 109, 9820 Merelbeke, Belgium
Ghent University, Department of Soil Management, Coupure Links 653, 9000 Ghent, Belgium