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Microwaving waste food products could be used to produce important chemicals and biofuels, new technology has shown.

The methods would potentially allow food waste to be processed at home and on an industrial scale.

The technology could provide a renewable source of carbon, as well as addressing the growing problem of global waste.

Professor James Clark of the University of York unveiled these plans at the British Science Festival in Bradford.

Using highly focused microwaves, the scientists believe they can input any organic waste, and extract useful chemical compounds that can be harnessed in materials and biofuel applications.

An international group of scientists have been working together to develop this technology, and they plan to build a demonstration facility in York later this year.

Future is orange

Waste is an unavoidable product of the increasingly complex processes of global food supply, with unused organic residues being produced in vast quantities at the farm, in the factory, and by the consumers themselves.

For example, in the production of cassava in Africa, 228 million tonnes of unused starch are produced each year, and the coffee grounds produced in Europe account for three million tonnes of waste a year. Much of the UK’s waste comes from agricultural residues – the unused leaves and stalks and husks of cereals and farm crops.

In the commercial production of orange juice in Brazil, only half of the fruit is used, leaving the rest as waste. This orange peel makes up eight million tonnes a year of waste.

The project OPEC, or the Orange Peel Exploitation Company, plans to ultimately bring the new technology developed at the University of York to Brazil, where fuels and chemicals can be derived from this orange peel waste.

Professor Clark explained: “You dice the peel, put it into a microwave field, focus that microwave field as you would do with a domestic microwave, but at a much higher power. The microwaves activate the cellulose, triggering the release of a lot of chemicals.”

One of these chemicals, called limonene, can be used directly in fragrances or contributing to making other highly-desired chemicals.

These orange peel-derived chemicals could ultimately be used to make many of the materials and chemicals that we currently rely on oil for.

Flexibility

Although the technology is still in testing, Professor Clark is optimistic about its potential to be used on all kinds of waste and on a range of scales.

The microwave technology would be able to process anything with cellulose in it, and works particularly well with paper and card.

They say it should be possible to put a range of waste types together into the machine and still extract useful substances.

The demonstration facility will be built later in the year to test this concept, and they expect to be processing 10kg of waste per hour.

If and when the technology becomes commercially available, the developers estimate that a machine costing around £1 million would be able to process around six tonnes of food waste per hour.

There is a limit to the maximum size of facility that can be built, because of the energy needed to make the microwaves, but OPEC hope the microwave machines may eventually be very flexible in size – usable in domestic to large scale industrial scenarios – and also transportable.

It is unclear whether this can become a carbon neutral process, but ultimately, all food waste produced at the farm, industrial, and domestic scales could be reused and recycled into clean renewable sources of carbon and chemicals.

Author: Leila Battison
Source: BBC
Original: http://bbc.in/ppppJe


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Usinas feitas na primeira metade do século 20 não tinham escada de peixes. Remoção começou nesta quinta (15) e vai durar três anos.

Autoridades norte-americanas começaram nesta quinta-feira (15) a derrubar duas barragens que estava atrapalhando o fluxo de peixes no Rio Elwha, no estado de Washington, no noroeste do país. O rio fica dentro do Parque Nacional Olympic e conta com uma variedade de espécies de salmão do Oceano Pacífico.

As usinas hidroelétricas de Elwha e Glines Canyon datam respectivamente de 1913 e 1927. Elas foram importantes para o desenvolvimento da Península Olympic, mas estão obsoletas, pois a maior parte da energia usada hoje na região vem do estado vizinho do Oregon. Na época em que foram construídas, ainda não se usava construir a passagem de peixes, um tipo de escada que permite que os animais subam o rio.

Orçada em cerca de US$ 325 milhões e com previsão de durar três anos, a remoção das barragens foi considerada a maior da história dos EUA. O projeto é um desejo de ambientalistas desde os anos 1970. A administração do parque estima que, antes da existência das barragens, cerca de 400 mil salmões subiam o rio a cada ano.

Os salmões são importantes para todo o ecossistema da região. Eles servem de alimentos para animais maiores, como ursos, e beneficiam também árvores, já que os peixes mortos fertilizam o solo.

Além disso, tribos nativas que habitam o parque nacional veem o salmão como um símbolo de sua cultura. O alto do rio, com seus salmões, é uma região sagrada para eles.

Fonte: Globo Natureza
Original: http://glo.bo/nXNbG5


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