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Food and Beverages Tech Review | Tuesday, January 11, 2022
In recent years, a slew of innovative startups has emerged with novel approaches to managing waste and converting it into useful resources.
Fremont, CA: Waste poured into the oceans pollutes the environment and endangers marine, animal, and human life. Traditional waste disposal technologies fall woefully short of adequately and properly handling the increasing load. However, many innovative startups have emerged in recent years with novel approaches to managing waste and converting it into valuable resources. It is achieved through cutting-edge technology and unparalleled collaboration and coordination among recyclers, designers, packagers, manufacturers, enterprises, towns, governments, and others.
1. Technology Booming Waste Management Process
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Computerized technologies will continue to be developed to assist and enforce waste separation from recyclable materials. This involves deploying robots to sort waste at recycling facilities, GPS-operated compactors, chipped recycle bins that record which households are recycling whenever the truck tips the bins, and other approaches. According to current research, evolving new technologies enable the on-site location of unconventional recyclables such as wasted food.
2. Converting Waste to Energy (WTE)
Circular economy initiatives, on-demand services, and anaerobic digesters are examples of WTE. Purchasing the "energy" of wasted food is one example of a circular economy metric. Food waste treatment technologies will soon be able to handle food waste on-site. Char technologies, for example, use a waste-to-energy process to convert anaerobic digestate into activated carbon. The activated carbon is subsequently sold to renewable natural gas companies. They then purchase used activated carbon from natural gas companies and market it as a soil supplement.
3. Involvement of Municipalities and Governments
Government rules promote new waste programs that are causing significant change on a local and national scale, partly because people are becoming more interested in recycling and composting. Cooperation and communication among multiple entities, on the other hand, are critical to the success of future waste management solutions. If there is no place to put the pre-sorted plastic waste, private collectors, municipalities, and cities may slow waste collection. Waste collectors and processors begin to enter into long-term supply agreements to achieve headway. Communities are debating the construction of regional amenities. This would bring economies of scale and allow for better risk management. Communities are also promoting methods of diverting waste away from landfills.
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