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[Pre-treatment of waste water in the food industries]
1988
Vidon, J.P. (Societe Francaise d'Amenagement de l'Environnement, Boulogne-Billancourt (France)) | Hoizey, D.
Local scale water-food nexus: Use of borehole-garden permaculture to realise the full potential of rural water supplies in Malawi 全文
2018
Rivett, M. O. (Mike O.) | Halcrow, Alistair W. | Schmalfuss, Janine | Stark, John A. | Truslove, Jonathan P. | Kumwenda, Steve | Harawa, Kettie A. | Nhlema, Muthi | Songola, Chrispine | Wanangwa, Gift J. | Miller, Alexandra V.M. | Kalin, Robert M.
Local-scale opportunities to address challenges of the water–food nexus in the developing world need to be embraced. Borehole-garden permaculture is advocated as one such opportunity that involves the sustainable use of groundwater spilt at hand-pump operated borehole supplies that is otherwise wasted. Spilt water may also pose health risks when accumulating as a stagnant pond. Rural village community use of this grey-water in permaculture projects to irrigate borehole gardens is proposed to primarily provide economic benefit whereby garden-produce revenue helps fund borehole water-point maintenance. Water-supply sustainability, increased food/nutrition security, health protection from malaria, and business opportunity benefits may also arise. Our goal has been to develop an, experience-based, framework for delivery of sustainable borehole-garden permaculture and associated benefits. This is based upon data collection and permaculture implementation across the rural Chikwawa District of Malawi during 2009–17. We use, stakeholder interviews to identify issues influencing uptake, gathering of stagnant pond occurrence data to estimate amelioration opportunity, quantification of permaculture profitability to validate economic potential, and critical assessment of recent permaculture uptake to identify continuing problems. Permaculture was implemented at 123 sites representing 6% of District water points, rising to 26% local area coverage. Most implementations were at, or near, newly drilled community-supply boreholes; hence, amelioration of prevalent stagnant ponds elsewhere remains a concern. The envisaged benefits of permaculture were manifest and early data affirm projected garden profitability and spin-off benefits of water-point banking and community micro-loan access. However, a diversity of technical, economic, social and governance issues were found to influence uptake and performance. Example issues include greater need for improved bespoke garden design input, on-going project performance assessment, and coordinated involvement of multi-sector governmental-development bodies to underpin the integrated natural-resource management required. The developed framework aims to manage the identified issues and requires the concerted action of all stakeholders. Based on the probable ubiquity of underlying issues, the framework is expected to be generalizable to the wider developing world. However, this particular application of permaculture represents a fraction of its greater potential opportunity for rural communities that should be explored.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Rice and irrigation in West Africa: achieving food security with agricultural water management strategies 全文
2013
Katic, Pamela G. | Namara, Regassa E. | Hope, Lesley | Owusu, E. | Fujii, H.
West Africa's rice imports currently satisfy 70% of the soaring local demand, worsening the food vulnerability of an increasingly urbanized population. Despite considerable rice-growing potential, lack of water control systems, access to improved seeds, agrochemicals and appropriate mechanization have resulted in modest production growth rates, unable to alter the region's dependency on imported rice. Governments aim to boost production with import duties and input subsidies. However, questions remain as to whether these policies enable the rice sector to respond to changing consumers preferences for high grade rice and to contribute to national economic growth. We present the results from a Policy Analysis Matrix (PAM) on rice production in Ghana, Burkina Faso and Niger and under three water management systems: irrigation (public scheme), supplemented rain-fed (rainfall aided by autonomously-sourced water supplies) and purely rain-fed. Our results show that policy interventions in these West African countries (i.e., input subsidies and import taxes) did not significantly enhance the profitability of rice production to farmers due to the effect of market failures (limited capital access and non-competitive market for rice) and the low quality of local milled rice. The PAM results point strongly to the importance of improving rice quality and yields through more efficient water management and post-harvest handling/processing and targeted breeding to match consumers' preferences.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Rice and irrigation in West Africa: achieving food security with agricultural water management strategies 全文
2013
Katic, Pamela G. | Namara, Regassa E. | Hope, Lesley | Owusu, E. | Fujii, H.
West Africa's rice imports currently satisfy 70% of the soaring local demand, worsening the food vulnerability of an increasingly urbanized population. Despite considerable rice-growing potential, lack of water control systems, access to improved seeds, agrochemicals and appropriate mechanization have resulted in modest production growth rates, unable to alter the region's dependency on imported rice. Governments aim to boost production with import duties and input subsidies. However, questions remain as to whether these policies enable the rice sector to respond to changing consumers preferences for high grade rice and to contribute to national economic growth. We present the results from a Policy Analysis Matrix (PAM) on rice production in Ghana, Burkina Faso and Niger and under three water management systems: irrigation (public scheme), supplemented rain-fed (rainfall aided by autonomously-sourced water supplies) and purely rain-fed. Our results show that policy interventions in these West African countries (i.e., input subsidies and import taxes) did not significantly enhance the profitability of rice production to farmers due to the effect of market failures (limited capital access and non-competitive market for rice) and the low quality of local milled rice. The PAM results point strongly to the importance of improving rice quality and yields through more efficient water management and post-harvest handling/processing and targeted breeding to match consumers' preferences.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Floods, soil and food – Interactions between water management and rice production within An Giang province, Vietnam 全文
2021
Livsey, John | Thi Da, Chau | Scaini, Anna | Lan, Thai Huynh Phuong | Long, Tran Xuan | Berg, Håkan | Manzoni, Stefano
Rapid intensification of Vietnamese rice production has had a positive effect on the nation's food production and economy. However, the sustainability of intensive rice production is increasingly being questioned within Vietnam, particularly in major agricultural provinces such as An Giang. The construction of high dykes within this province, which allow for complete regulation of water onto rice fields, has enabled farmers to grow up to three rice crops per year. However, the profitability of producing three crops is rapidly decreasing as farmers increase their use of chemical fertilizer inputs and pesticides. Increased fertilizer inputs are partly used to replace natural flood-borne, nutrient-rich sediment inputs that have been inhibited by the dykes, but farmers believe that despite this, soil health within the dyke system is degrading. However, the effects of the dykes on soil properties have not been tested. Therefore, a sampling campaign was conducted to assess differences in soil properties caused by the construction of dykes. The results show that, under present fertilization practices, although dykes may inhibit flood-borne sediments, this does not lead to a systematic reduction in nutrients that typically limit rice growth within areas producing three crops per year. Concentrations of total nitrogen, available phosphorous, and both total and available potassium, and pH were higher in the surface layer of soils of three crop areas when compared to two crop areas. This suggests that yield declines may be caused by other factors related to the construction of dykes and the use of chemical inputs, and that care should be taken when attempting to maintain crop yields. Attempting to compensate for yield declines by increasing fertilizer inputs may ultimately have negative effects on yields.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Effect of environmental regulation on the profitability of sustainable water use in the agro-food industry 全文
2011
Sánchez, I.M Román | Ruiz, J.M Molina | López, J.L Casas | Pérez, J.A Sánchez
Proper management of water in the food industry will depend, to a large extent, on economic incentives regulated by legislation. The influence of water cost and wastewater discharge taxes is analyzed, as factors that encourage the implementation of water recycling systems and wastewater treatments within the food industry. Two Spanish taxation models are taken into account: at the national level, the Waste Control Tax; and at the local level, the autonomous Sanitary Tax. The cost reduction obtained in the Waste Control Tax by investing 68,305€ in minimizing water consumption from 193,200m³/year to 142,417m³/year is negligible since it is not a quantitatively elevated tax (from 2262€/year to 1407€/year). With regard to the Sanitary Tax, diversity affects the tax quantity and, consequently, the pressure exerted on the effluent quality in each case. In the Region of Murcia, the sanitary tax reduction was 8885€/year; and in La Rioja, the saving is greater (38,642€/year) given that this tax is considerably higher. Designing more stringent environmental regulation will markedly enhance the development of new technologies for improving wastewater treatment towards the goal of environmentally acceptable discharging and water reuse.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Water profitability analysis to improve food security and climate resilience: a case study in the Egyptian Nile Delta 全文
2022
Badawy, Adham | Elmahdi, Amgad | El-Hafez, S. A. | Ibrahim, A.
The food self-sufficiency policy has always featured as an unquestionable policy objective for Egypt. This is understandable when one considers both the high population growth and the social and political vulnerability associated with a dependence on food imports and world market food prices such as wheat. Intensive agriculture has led to a growing subsidy burden for the Egyptian government. In addition, the agricultural fields in Egypt are commonly distributed with relatively small sizes parcels that usually reduce the reliability of the agricultural sector, particularly in the delta region, to meet the national food policy. On top of that, climate change, through changing weather patterns and increased temperatures, is affecting agricultural yields and thus farmers’ livelihoods. A water profitability analysis was conducted for three governorates in the Nile Delta in Egypt to establish a baseline and assess the net return per unit of water of the main crops in each of these governorates; this can act as a reference of the water profitability of different crops before they are affected by climate change and other internal and external factors. The analysis was based on extensive in-person surveys in each governorate in addition to workshop discussions with farmers. The study has highlighted the impact of a lack of extension services, which limits farmers’ ability to increase their land and water productivity. Farmers with more access to subsidized production inputs managed to achieve higher levels of water profitability even on smaller lands. Finally, we drew from our findings key policy actions to improve water profitability and land productivity for farmers in the Nile Delta to achieve higher levels of food security. This will help build resilient food production systems that are reliable in the face of climate change and other drivers. In addition, an integrated nexus strategy and plan for the inter- and intra-country is recommended to address the challenges related to food and climate security.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Water profitability analysis to improve food security and climate resilience: a case study in the Egyptian Nile Delta 全文
2022
Badawy, Adham | Elmahdi, Amgad | El-Hafez, S. A. | Ibrahim, A.
The food self-sufficiency policy has always featured as an unquestionable policy objective for Egypt. This is understandable when one considers both the high population growth and the social and political vulnerability associated with a dependence on food imports and world market food prices such as wheat. Intensive agriculture has led to a growing subsidy burden for the Egyptian government. In addition, the agricultural fields in Egypt are commonly distributed with relatively small sizes parcels that usually reduce the reliability of the agricultural sector, particularly in the delta region, to meet the national food policy. On top of that, climate change, through changing weather patterns and increased temperatures, is affecting agricultural yields and thus farmers’ livelihoods. A water profitability analysis was conducted for three governorates in the Nile Delta in Egypt to establish a baseline and assess the net return per unit of water of the main crops in each of these governorates; this can act as a reference of the water profitability of different crops before they are affected by climate change and other internal and external factors. The analysis was based on extensive in-person surveys in each governorate in addition to workshop discussions with farmers. The study has highlighted the impact of a lack of extension services, which limits farmers’ ability to increase their land and water productivity. Farmers with more access to subsidized production inputs managed to achieve higher levels of water profitability even on smaller lands. Finally, we drew from our findings key policy actions to improve water profitability and land productivity for farmers in the Nile Delta to achieve higher levels of food security. This will help build resilient food production systems that are reliable in the face of climate change and other drivers. In addition, an integrated nexus strategy and plan for the inter- and intra-country is recommended to address the challenges related to food and climate security.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Cooperative game-based anchor process allocation within sustainable palm oil based complex for environment-food-energy-water nexus evaluation 全文
2021
Tan, Yue Dian | Lim, Jeng Shiun | Andiappan, Viknesh | Wan Alwi, Sharifah Rafidah
The challenge in clean palm oil production falls on the management of palm oil mill effluent which is a notable source of greenhouse gas emissions and water pollution. To address these critics against edible palm oil, an integrated palm oil-based complex (POBC) considering effluent elimination and refinery integration is suitable for environmental-food-energy-water (EFEW) nexus development. Optimal retrofit of palm oil mill into EFEW nexus-integrated POBC requires multi-objective considerations to balance the trade-offs between profitability, energy contribution, greenhouse gas, water and land footprints via fuzzy optimisation. With limited practical knowledge, potential flowsheet modifications should be investigated for flexible POBC design. In a cooperative game context, interconnecting processes act as multiple players cooperating to achieve the goal of the game, i.e., POBC performance, where each player has a distinctive impact on the outcome. In this work, such process performance was suggested to be distributed using cooperative game model, to target the EFEW-based anchor process, i.e., the process stage of greatest contribution in the weighted EFEW nexus, for desired flowsheet advancement. Considering these aspects, an integrated fuzzy and cooperative game optimisation framework was developed to identify the anchor process of an EFEW nexus-integrated POBC. EFEW objective-based process performance allocation in the fuzzy optimal POBC was weighted by the decision-maker to allocate the anchor process using developed models and Excel tools. Nut/kernel separation and cogeneration stage is the EFEW-based anchor process in the fuzzy optimal POBC with EFEW nexus score of 41% in this work. A comparative analysis between the proposed method with other approach was done. The favourability of EFEW contributions by POBC in terms of benefit-drawback ratio increased with the percentage of boiler efficiency increment within the targeted anchor process. Targeting anchor process aids planning for process maintenance and advancement to avoid resource wastage on sub-critical processes.
显示更多 [+] 显示较少 [-]Impact of the New Energy Context on the Feasibility of Solar Water Heating Systems in the Agri-Food Industry 全文
2023
Perdigones, A. | Baptista, F.J. | Garcia, J.L. | Benavente, R. M. | Mazarrón, F.R.
The new energy context since 2021 has led to dramatic increases in the energy bills of agribusinesses, affecting the price of foodstuffs. A considerable part of energy consumption is due to the heating of water at high temperatures. The present study analyzed the feasibility of using a Solar Water Heating System (SWHS) with an evacuated tube collector. In particular, the required sizing changes, potential savings and cost-effectiveness were analyzed. The results show that the new energy context makes the SWHS investment highly attractive: a payback of less than 4 years in most of the scenarios analyzed; energy savings of more than 60% in the scenarios with higher irradiation; a reduction in total energy expenditure of more than 50% in the favorable scenarios close to the current reality. The new context especially favors cold and temperate climates, with very sharp drops in payback compared to the previous situation. To achieve these values, it is necessary to design an optimized sizing of the SWHS, reducing the risk of future variations in the price of energy. The results of the study should serve as a reference for decision making in the agroindustrial sector to reduce the energy bill and strategic dependence on fossil fuels from third countries.
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