Closing the food loops: guidelines and criteria for improving nutrient management

  • McConville J
  • Drangert J
  • Tidåker P
  • et al.
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Abstract

© 2015 McConville et al. CC-BY Attribution 4.0 License. As global consumption expands, the world is increasingly facing threats to resource availability and food security. To meet future food demands, agricultural resource efficiency needs to be optimized for both water and nutrients. Policy makers should start to radically rethink nutrient management across the entire food chain. Closing the food loop by recycling nutrients in food waste and excreta is an important way of limiting the use of mineral nutrients, as well as improving national and global food security. This article presents a framework for sustainable nutrient management and discusses the responsibility of four key stakeholder groups—agriculture, the food industry, consumers, and waste management—for achieving an effective food loop. In particular, we suggest a number of criteria, policy actions, and supporting strategies based on a cross-sectoral application of the waste hierarchy.

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McConville, J., Drangert, J.-O., Tidåker, P., Neset, T.-S., Rauch, S., Strid, I., & Tonderski, K. (2015). Closing the food loops: guidelines and criteria for improving nutrient management. Sustainability: Science, Practice and Policy, 11(2), 33–43. https://doi.org/10.1080/15487733.2015.11908144

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