A Systemic Design Approach Applied to Rice and Wine Value Chains. The Case of the InnovaEcoFood Project in Piedmont (Italy)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Circular Economy Strategies and Systemic Design Approach
2.1. Circular Economy
2.2. Systemic Design: Similarity and Differences with CE
- (1)
- The output (waste) of one system becomes the input (resource) for another, which creates an increase in cash flow and new job opportunities;
- (2)
- relationships generate the system itself: each relationship contributes to the system, and it can be within or outside of the system;
- (3)
- self-producing systems support and reproduce themselves, thus allowing them to define their own paths of action and jointly co-evolve; it means that industries connected each other in a systemic approach are in dynamic balance and will change their sets easily to adapt themselves to the continuous changes of the environmental conditions (market, supply chains,…);
- (4)
- act locally: acting locally values local resources (human, culture and material) and helps to solve local problems by creating new opportunities. The innovative solutions can come from all over the world, but they should be appropriate for the local context, and the real values should come from the expertise, resources, knowledge of a specific area;
- (5)
- people at the center of the project to be connected to their own environmental, social and cultural context. The real needs of people are the focus of the design process and not generate false longing to satisfy the companies’ wishes.
- SD opens the use of output in different sectors, not only the one from which it comes;
- SD aims territorial valorization and not just a geographical concentration of industries;
- SD goes over the competition among enterprises, in favor of real collaboration.
3. Case Study: The Rice Supply Chain
3.1. Analysis of Rice Supply Chain Waste
- Straw: it is obtained even before harvesting, during threshing in the field; it is composed of cellulose, lignin, waxes, minerals and silicates, and is used as compost, fertilizer [72], feed, fuel [73] or is used in the construction sector, or for the creation of new packaging material or cloths [74,75,76].
- Husk: the woody part of the seed is almost totally used in combustion plants to produce electricity, thanks to its adequate calorific power [77]. From combustion, 16% ash residue, rich in carbon and silica, is obtained and used in the production of refractory bricks, tyres and steelworks as thermal insulation and antioxidant in castings [78,79,80]. The adsorption potential of rice husk allows its use for the treatment and purification of drinking water [81,82,83].
- Broken rice: the size of the broken rice varies depending on the variety of rice from which it comes: relatively small breaks are obtained from round rice, much larger from long rice, but in any case, the size of the piece is variable because the grains of rice can break at any point or even in multiple parts. Broken rice is largely used to obtain rice flour [84], but it is also used as it is for example in the production of beer, puffed products and animal feed, and a large part is added to rice destined for the poorest countries, where it reaches even 50% of the product.
- Green grain and stained grains: they are used exclusively in animal feed.
- Gem: it has a low ash content and a high content of proteins, vitamins and fats, and it is possible to obtain an oil that is used in niche foods; its primary use remains, however, animal feed.
- Hull or bran: it is an abundant and underutilized by-product of rice milling and polishing (Figure 2a). It is rich of bioactive components and emerging evidence reveals rice bran (and its extraction products) as a functional food supplement with broad health benefits. Bran is used primarily for animal feed and in the pharmaceutical industry, by extracting calcium, magnesium oesophosphates, gamma-oryzanols, phenolics, flavonoids, tocopherols and inositols [85].
- Flour (rice middlings): a by-product of the first polishing of de-husked rice (Figure 2b). It mainly consists of particles of the aleuron layer, endosperm and germ. It is obtained after hulling, and it is rich in protein, potassium, iron and zinc. It is intended for animal feed.
Applications and Critical Issues
- rice 62%;
- husk 20%;
- broken rice 6%;
- green grain 4%;
- gem, hulls and flour 7%;
- stained grains 1%.
- the wastewater generated by the food processing of rice and the cleaning of machinery is rich in organic compounds characterized by high BOD levels as a pollutant load.
- the husk produced is thrown into a landfill or waste-to-energy plant to produce silica, with high air emissions that are filtered but produce particles and ashes that are pressed and delivered to the landfill.
- hulls and flour are used only as animal feed while they have characteristics suitable for human consumption.
3.2. Potential and Scalability
4. Case Study: Wine Supply Chain
4.1. Analysis of the Wine Supply Chain Waste
- crop residues (vine shoots, pruning and stalks);
- organic residues from the winery (grape seeds, grapes skins, pomaces, lees and distillation residues);
- wastewater that contains solid processing residues (seeds, skins etc.), traces of products used in wine treatment (fining agents) and residues of cleaning and disinfection products.
Applications and Critical Issues
- Vine shoots and pruning: branches and stems (i.e., woody parts) are usually disposed of generating environmental problems because they are burned in the field. This operation is nowadays more and more sporadic because it is considered ecologically incorrect. Indeed, it causes the emission of fumes and the mineralization of the organic substance, precluding the formation of humus. As a replacement for this practice, the vine shoots are chopped and buried, thus constituting a source of organic matter in the soil (with an annual replenishment equal to about a quarter of the required quota) and of natural nutrients coming from slow mineralization. An alternative is their use for energy production as biomass. Vineyard pruning residues can amount to a few tons per hectare, with production varying according to the vigor of the vine and the form of training adopted; the energy yield also varies according to numerous factors. The annual biomass per hectare is between 1.5 and 3 tons and provides energy equivalent to 0.5–0.9 tons of diesel.
- Stalks: the stems of the white and rosé grapes come from the destemming phase. They have high fiber content, mainly lignin and cellulose, as well as a high percentage of nutritive mineral elements such as nitrogen and potassium. They are primarily used for composting [92,93,94] and are subsequently spread in the soil. The resulting compost can also be used as a substrate for the cultivation of Agaricus Bisporus, the most widely used species of mushroom in traditional cooking [95]. Another similar waste is obtained through thinning, i.e., the pruning of some ripe bunches that are abandoned in the field to reduce fruit production in favor of a higher quality finished product, wine.
- Marcs: After pressing, in the white and rosé wines, the remaining solid parts are not fermented marc (grapes skins, pomaces). This marc (Figure 3a) is a high moisture content mixture, which is also rich in sugar (around 14%). In red wine processing, indeed, are produced fermented marc, reverting sugars into alcohol This output has a variable chemical composition depending on various factors, such as the seasonal trend, the place of origin, the variety of grape, the time of harvest and the different techniques used in winemaking. Among the main uses are: direct spreading on the land for agronomic use; composting and subsequent agronomic use [96]; energy use as biomass through biogas or combustion plant, pharmaceutical and/or cosmetic use [97,98], food use, enocyanin extraction, zootechnical use, in the preparation of animal diets, animal feed [99], production of tannin-based materials and textile dye [100,101,102,103,104,105].
- The marc also contains the seeds (grape pips or ‘vinaccioli’ in Italian) which may be separated later by drying and centrifuging. By cold pressing grape seeds, an oil can be obtained without the use of chemical solvents, used both in food and cosmetics [106]. Grape seeds are rich in calcium, phosphorus and flavonoids and organic acids with high lightening properties. More precisely, they contain a good quantity of linoleic acid, an essential fatty acid, rich in omega 6, a well-known antioxidant and anti-cholesterol. Rich in polyphenols, it is modest in vitamin E content, especially when compared to other vegetable oils, such as corn, soybean, wheat germ or sunflower oil.
- The lees are the solid waste that remains after the fermentation. They are a mixture of dead yeasts and other solid wastes like tartaric acid and pigments (Figure 3b). Lees are traditionally an essential raw material to produce ethanol and tartaric acid [107,108]. The latter has many applications in the food industry, as it is an excellent stabilizer, replacing citric acid [109]. Lees can be used for the recovery of high value-added products [110], among which phenolic compounds stand out. It consists of yeasts, potassium salts, calcium and tartaric acid.
- from the lees, it is possible to obtain alcohol for food and industrial use, grappa (in association with marc), calcium tartrate, natural tartaric acid, colorants, ethanol, beta-glucans, food;
- from the marc it is possible to obtain grappa or alcohols (for food and/or industrial use), natural tartaric acid, lactic acid, proteins, bioemulsifiers, biotensives, tannins, polyphenols, antiallergens, hydrolytic enzymes, bioethanol, fertilizers, soil improvers, compost (in association with pruning residues) absorbents for decontamination of heavy metals, substrates for human food or micro-organisms (in association with pruning residues), biocontrol agents, electricity (in association with pruning residues), resveratrol, anthocyanins;
- from grape pips, it is possible to obtain tannins, antioxidants, antimicrobials, flour, edible oil, cosmetics, biodiesel, lubricants.
- 80% wine and must;
- 10% of grape marc;
- 6% of grape pips (seeds);
- 4% of stalks.
- the vine pruning currently has no specific use, but are managed by each farm to reduce the damage (both environmental and economic);
- the marc, skins, stalks and seeds of the grapes are currently destined for distillation, where they lose the organoleptic qualities that would allow them to be reused in the food sector;
- the lees, a residue deposited after the fermentation of the wine, is currently disposed of.
4.2. Potential and Scalability
5. InnovaEcoFood Project
5.1. Objectives
5.2. Technological Partners
5.3. Systemic Design Method and Schemes
5.4. Production of Food from Waste
5.5. The Relationships Implemented by the Project
6. Discussions
6.1. Study Limitations & Recommendations for Future Research
6.2. Impacts
- in the case of the wine value chain, the vine is a widely-extended crop in the whole Europe territory, as a grant for replicability of the generated model, (it has European relevance and offers the possibility to think about its scalability and the replicability of the approach);
- in the case of the rice value chain, on the other hand, it is a local/regional value chain. Re-integrating them into local food and diet provides an example of how the approach allows the valorization of regional by-products.
6.3. Limitations of the SD Approach
- Non-linear problems-the whole is greater than the sum of its parts
- Adaptive behavior-both the system and its constituent parts adjust over time to the changes in the environment, within the system, and within the components
- Self-organizing capacity-components self-organize without central direction
- Emergent properties-it is hard to anticipate the system outcome of interventions carried out at the component level [119].
6.4. Future Research
- using different types of grapes, possibly of biological origin, to evaluate the differences in the extraction phase, but also the organoleptic differences when flour is used directly in food formulation;
- introducing variations in the storage phase and the transport of the output (immediate, refrigerated, and without exposure to light), at the same time of bottling for red wine or destemming for white wine. In fact, in the white winemaking process, stalks, grape seeds, and skins are removed before fermentation. Evaluating the differences between the output of the red and white wines would be of great interest, as they have radically different characteristics;
- introducing small machinery for the treatment of the output on-site (at winemakers and social cellars) to preserve the characteristics as much as possible and optimize storage while reducing costs and impacts. It would be possible to transport the dehydrated product without transporting the liquid component, which is unused.
- modifying the processes that use heat (such as dehydration) preferring processes at low temperatures to avoid incurring the degradation of compounds, which deteriorate in contact with heat.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
By-Product | Application |
---|---|
Lees and pomace | Improving the quality of fish feeds in terms of organoleptic characteristics and health benefits [110] |
Pomace/marc | Valorization of grape agro-waste to produce bioactive molecules and new polymeric materials [100]. Extraction of molecules, fractions and biologically active biomolecules with a possible use in the nutraceutical and cosmeceutical industry from vinery marcs [97,98]. Production of compost from marc [96]. Improving animal fleshes with different pomace powder preparations [99]. Production of tannin-based adhesives for wood industry, tannin-based materials such as biocomposites and rigid foams [101]. Production of textile dye from grape pomace [102,103,104,105] |
Seeds | Extraction of bioactive compounds with high added value before using biomass for energy purposes (e.g., in food, cosmetics, and pharmaceuticals sectors, biopolymers and energy sector to produce biohydrogen and biomethane [106]. |
Wastewater | Analysis of water consumption in wine production to identify wastewater treatment and management improvements towards water reuse [120]. |
Winery waste | Biorefinery opportunities from winery waste (biomass production) [121]. Employing winery waste to re-balance soil fertility; valorization of these in the agricultural sector or different industrial chains (e.g., cosmetics, nutraceuticals, etc.) [122,123]. |
Production of compost and biofertilizer from viticulture waste [124]. |
By-Product | Application |
---|---|
Straw | Natural fertilizer is used to remove phosphorus loading in water [72]. Extraction of water-soluble phenolic compounds to incorporate into bioactive starch-based films, producing bioactive food packaging [74]. Creation of innovative cloths from straw rice [75]. Transformation of rice straw in glucose for bio-carburant production [73]. |
Husk | Rice husk to purify colored wastewater [81]. Production of jet fuel through fluidized-bed fast pyrolysis, hydro-processing and hydro-cracking/isomerization [125]. Utilization of rice husk for a potential waste-water treatment due to their adsorption potential across a variety of common drinking water contaminants [82,85]. Production of energy and fertilizer by using rice waste [77]. |
Husk ash | Production of sustainable plastic composites from ashes (including rice husk ash) [78]. Production of eco-friendly concretes from rice husk ash [79]. |
Husk and straw | Rice husks and rice straw used as substrates for solid-state fermentation with dikaryotic and monokaryotic strains of Pleurotus sapidus [126]. Production of insulating materials for green building from rice straw mixed with waste wool. Production of biofillers from husk for polymer composites, mono- and di-glyceride mixtures. Extraction of high-added-value molecules for the food industry from bran [80]. |
Husk and bran (hull) | Development of a novel bio-fertilizer using rice bran and husks [127,128]. |
Straw, husk and bran (hull) | Development of new products as biofuels, enzymes, biodegradable material food contact, single cell protein, bio-adsorbent, nanoparticles, bio alcohol, bioactive compounds like fibers, phytochemicals, minerals, so on [76]. |
Bran (hull) | Oil extraction from defatted rice bran for bioethanol, lactic acid, and biobutanol production [129]. Extraction of fatty acid profile and bioactive compounds such as phenolics, flavonoids, gamma-oryzanols, and tocopherols, from bran rice [85]. |
Broken rice | Development of gluten-free products that require pre-gelatinized starch, such as pasta, from broken rice flour [84]. |
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Marcs | Skins and Seeds | Lees |
---|---|---|
Sugar (14%) | Lipids (15%) | Tartaric acid (12%) |
High moisture (65%) | Proteins (10%) | Proteins (20%) |
Fiber, as cellulose, pectin, hemicellulose, lignin, polyphenols (65%) | Fiber, as cellulose, pectin, hemicellulose, lignin, polyphenols (25%) | |
Sugar and pigments (10%) Lipids (4%) |
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Fiore, E.; Stabellini, B.; Tamborrini, P. A Systemic Design Approach Applied to Rice and Wine Value Chains. The Case of the InnovaEcoFood Project in Piedmont (Italy). Sustainability 2020, 12, 9272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219272
Fiore E, Stabellini B, Tamborrini P. A Systemic Design Approach Applied to Rice and Wine Value Chains. The Case of the InnovaEcoFood Project in Piedmont (Italy). Sustainability. 2020; 12(21):9272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219272
Chicago/Turabian StyleFiore, Eleonora, Barbara Stabellini, and Paolo Tamborrini. 2020. "A Systemic Design Approach Applied to Rice and Wine Value Chains. The Case of the InnovaEcoFood Project in Piedmont (Italy)" Sustainability 12, no. 21: 9272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219272
APA StyleFiore, E., Stabellini, B., & Tamborrini, P. (2020). A Systemic Design Approach Applied to Rice and Wine Value Chains. The Case of the InnovaEcoFood Project in Piedmont (Italy). Sustainability, 12(21), 9272. https://doi.org/10.3390/su12219272