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. 2016 Oct 25;8(6):2209–2227. doi: 10.1007/s12649-016-9720-0

Table 1.

Types of food waste in Molson Coors and their management alternatives

Spent grain Waste beer Conditioning bottom Filter waste Trub
Edibility Inedible Edible Edible Inedible Inedible
State N/A Eatable Eatable N/A N/A
Origin Plant based Plant based Principally microorganisms* Microorganisms* Plant based
Complexity Single product Single product Single product Mixed product Mixed product
Animal-product presence N/A N/A N/A Not in contact with animal-based products Not in contact with animal-based products
Treatment N/A Processed Unprocessed N/A N/A
Packaging N/A Separable from packaging Unpackaged N/A N/A
Packaging biodegradability N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A
Stage of the supply chain Non-catering waste Non-catering waste Non-catering waste Non-catering waste Non-catering waste
Current treatment Animal feeding 95 % animal feeding + 5 % sewage Animal feeding 50 % compost + 50 % sewage Animal feeding
Suggested alternative Animal feeding Redistribution for human consumption Animal feeding Anaerobic digestion Animal feeding
Further possibilities Production of foodstuff N/A Production of foodstuff Industrial uses Production of foodstuff
Quantity ≈70,000 t/year 14,000 t/year 7000 t/year 1200 t/year ≈700 t/year

The suggested alternative is based on the FWMDT presented in the Figs. 47. Possible alternative options from the food waste hierarchy are suggested as further possibilities when they are better than the suggested alternative. The particular type of diatomaceous earth in filter waste was not identified and thus it was considered to be not suitable for animal feeding. N/A means ‘not applicable’ or that the information is not necessary. * The ‘microorganisms’ indicator, from the origin stage, was considered as plant based