Search for any green Service

Find green products from around the world in one place

Fighting food waste: New system uses wireless signals in the sub-terahertz band to determine fruit ripeness

Fighting food waste: New system uses wireless signals in the sub-terahertz band to determine fruit ripeness

One bad apple may not spoil the whole bunch, but when it comes to distributing food, a lot of good goes out with the bad.

Now, researchers from Princeton University and Microsoft Research have developed a fast and accurate way to determine fruit quality, piece by piece, using high-frequency wireless technology. The new tool gives suppliers a way to sort fruit based on fine-grained ripeness measurements. It promises to help cut food waste by optimizing distribution: good fruit picked from bad bunches, ripe fruit moved to the front of the line.

Current methods to determine ripeness are either unreliable, overly broad, too time-consuming or too expensive to implement at large scales, according to the new study, presented Oct. 3 at the 2023 ACM MobiCom conference on networking and mobile computing.

“There is no systematic way of determining the ripeness status of fruits and vegetables,” said Yasaman Ghasempour, assistant professor of electrical and computer engineering at Princeton and one of the study’s principal investigators. “It is mostly random visual inspection, where you check one fruit out of the box on distribution lines and estimate its quality through physical contact or color change.”

But this kind of visual inspection leads to poor estimates much of the time, she said. Rather than rely on how the peel looks or how it feels to the touch, advanced wireless signals can effectively peek under the surface of a piece of fruit and reveal richer information about its quality.

Roughly one-third of all food produced in the United States gets tossed each year, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. Worldwide, the United Nations has estimated that half of all fruits and vegetables go to waste. The new study’s authors say inefficiency at this scale is only seen in the food industry, and that automated, noninvasive and scalable technologies can play a role in reducing all that waste.

“When we look at the global challenges around food security, nutrition and environmental sustainability, the issue of food waste plays a major role,” said Ranveer Chandra, the Managing Director of Research for Industry and CTO of Agri-Food at Microsoft. He said the amount of food wasted each year could feed more than a billion people. And that food waste accounts for nearly 6% of the world’s greenhouse gas emissions. “If we could reduce food waste, it would help feed the population, reduce malnutrition, and help mitigate the impact of climate change,” Chandra said.

The team, led by Ghasempour and Chandra, developed a system for determining ripeness using wireless signals in the sub-terahertz band that can scan fruit on a conveyor belt. The sub-terahertz signals—between microwave and infrared—interact with the fruit in ways that can be measured in fine detail, leading to readouts of sugar and dry matter content beneath the surface of the fruit’s skin.

Next-generation wireless systems, like the coming 6G standards, will be designed to accommodate new high-frequency bands such as terahertz and sub-terahertz signals, the researchers said. But while these bands have begun to spark new communication technologies, the Princeton-Microsoft technique is one of the first to leverage these signals for sensing, particularly for smart food sensing.

As fruit continues to ripen after harvest, its physical, chemical and electrical properties also change. Bananas yellow. Grapes wrinkle. Avocados darken. But for a lot of fruit, it is hard to know how those outward markers correlate to actual ripeness or quality. Anyone who has bitten into a perfectly shiny red apple only to find it mealy and dry understands this disparity.

When a sub-terahertz pulse impinges on a piece of fruit, its rays go more than skin deep. Some frequencies get absorbed, others get reflected, and a lot of frequencies do a little of both with varying intensity. The reflection creates its own signal across a range of frequencies, and that signal has a detailed and specific shape—a signature. By modeling the physics of these interactions and procuring a lot of data, the researchers were able to use that signature to reveal the fruit’s ripeness status.

“It was really challenging to develop a model for this,” Ghasempour said. She said fruits’ many structural layers—seeds, pulp, skin—added complexity to the problem, as well as variations in size, thickness, orientation and texture. “So, we performed some wave modeling and simulations, and then augmented those insights with the data that we collected.”

In the experiment, they used persimmons, avocados and apples. Fruits with smooth skins are easiest to measure. The bumpiness of, say, an avocado reflects a weaker signal and produces unwanted effects. But the researchers found ways to get around the bumpiness problem and say that with enough data the method can be applied to most fruits.

They believe this tool can be extended to other kinds of foods, too—including meats and beverages—by using different kinds of physiological markers. Those extended use cases could have big implications for food safety monitoring and consumer choice.

 

 


 

 

Source  Tech Xplore

Self-healing concrete and plastic-eating insects: The best green innovations of February 2023

Self-healing concrete and plastic-eating insects: The best green innovations of February 2023

It’s nearly time for edie 23, edie’s biggest face-to-face event of the year. And during the event, which will take place on March 1-2, Springwise Chair, James Bidwell, will host a session with Google Head of Sustainability, Adam Elman on how artificial intelligence (AI) can accelerate corporate climate action.

Inspired by this, our first two innovations this month are leveraging AI to improve sustainability – in surprising ways. We’ve probably all heard about ChatGPT. But now, one startup is leveraging the technology that powers it to develop a text-based system for managing restaurant inventories – reducing food waste in the process. And AI is also being used to grow edible insects as an alternative to more environmentally damaging protein sources.

There has certainly been a buzz around insect-based technology this month, as creepy crawlies also feature in our third innovation – this time a plastic-eating variety of waxworm that can tackle plastic pollution while providing fishmeal for farmed salmon.

Elsewhere, we have spotted two kitchen-based devices that are helping people to deliver sustainability at home. The first lets users make their own climate-friendly plant milk in minutes at the touch of a button. The second, is a home bin that stops the nutrients found in food scraps from going to waste by converting discarded food into farm feed.

And finally, it has long been known that the Ancient Romans were exceptionally good at making long-lasting concrete. But their secrets have long been lost – until now. Today, a team of researchers is hoping to commercialize a Roman-inspired self-healing concrete mix.

 

AI-powered restaurant management

Poring over data at the end of a long working day is likely the last thing anybody in the restaurant industry is keen to do. But, with technology increasingly becoming integral to a successful business, this tedious work is essential. Making it easier is Pennsylvania-based ClearCOGS, which has partnered up with ChatGPT to create a system that allows restaurants to access insights about their inventory and operations quickly and easily.

ChatGPT has gained significant attention as a language-based AI because it can analyse data, provide insights, and make human-like recommendations in real-time. Pairing this new technology with ClearCOGS’ Predictive Forecasting System creates a place for restaurant operators to ask questions 24 hours a day, seven days a week, and receive data-driven answers.

Using a simple text-based query, restaurant operators can get fast answers to questions like, “what are my top selling items this week?” or “I have five kilogrammes of beef in inventory; how likely is it that I’m going to run out today?” With the power of GPT-3, the latest natural language processing technology, the AI system can also understand and respond to complex questions, allowing operators to make efficient and informed decisions about their inventory, while discovering ways to improve. This can help reduce waste.

 

Digital technologies to make insect farming more efficient

Experts are becoming increasingly concerned about how the world’s growing population will be fed in an equitable and sustainable way.

One solution is edible insects – both for human consumption and as animal feed. This, it is hoped, will help free up land and resources, as insects require far less space and fewer resources to farm than other protein sources such as beef or chicken. But producing them en masse has so far proved challenging. Tech company Entocycle is turning to AI to help.

The London-based startup uses smart technology to help insect farms work efficiently and sustainably (and manage billions of insects at any one time). Its technology helps farms improve accuracy and efficiency while reducing manual intervention. It does this by, for example, measuring populations in a farm to automate food requirements and controlling the temperature to optimise insect health.

The company focuses on black soldier fly farms, an insect that grows very rapidly and can survive on food waste. These insects are nutrient-rich, including more zinc and iron than lean meat, and more calcium than milk per gram.

 

Feeding fish with plastic-eating insects

Seafood is one of the most highly traded commodities in the global food system, and in 2018, for the first time in history, global farmed fish production surpassed that of beef production. And experts expect demand for aquatic foods to double by 2050. How to sustainably farm fish to meet such high levels of global demand is a pressing concern for the aquaculture industry.

Part of that concern lies in finding the best solution to the challenge of what to feed farmed fish. Many growers seek circular solutions that minimise waste at all stages of the production process, including Glasgow-based researchers who recently discovered a surprising option for fishmeal. The team found that waxworms fed on plastic appeared more digestible to salmon than those fed on a regular diet.

Set up by Dr. Martin Llewellyn at the University of Glasgow, SalmoSim is an in-vitro Atlantic Salmon gut simulator that helps those in the aquaculture industry test out new medicines or feedstock for farmed fish. The team provides tailored experiments that analyse the absorption of sugars, volatile fatty acids, amino acids, and more throughout a salmon’s digestive process. And it was in one of these experiments that plastic-fed waxworms were found to be a highly digestible feed.

By reducing demand for marine-grown fish meal, plastic-fed waxworms could provide a dual purpose – reducing plastic waste while feeding the high volumes of fish demanded by a growing global market. The research team’s next steps include assessing the healthfulness of the salmon fed on the waxworms for human consumption.

 

A countertop device for making plant-based milks at home

Non-dairy milks have a lower environmental impact than dairy equivalents and are fairly easy to make at home, requiring a nut or seed, water, and a blender. But despite this, many of us just don’t have the time, inclination, or ingredients to make plant-based milks by hand.

Step in GROW UP, a sleek, countertop brewer designed to produce fresh, non-dairy milk within minutes. Users choose from a range of up to 10 different ingredients, including nuts, oats, coconuts, and hemp seeds. All it takes to make a glass of fresh milk is one cup of the chosen ingredient, plus water, added to the top of the brewer. With the push of a button, the device then makes fresh plant-based milk in less than six minutes.

Parts of the machine are dishwasher safe. GROW UP also does not use single-use packaging, and the machine includes a self-cleaning function. The brewing device is currently available for pre-order with a $50 deposit. It is scheduled to be shipped in spring 2023.

 

A bin that turns your home’s food waste into animal feed

Food waste is a growing problem around the world. When we waste food, many nutrients and resources are wasted with it. Moreover, when food ends up rotting in landfill, methane is released, which further contributes to global warming. Now, Mill Industries Inc has created a bin that conserves the nutrients from food waste and sends them back to farms where they can feed chickens and help protect the planet.

Every ‘member’ who subscribes to the food waste system receives a Mill kitchen bin that dries, shrinks, and de-stinks your kitchen waste overnight, turning it into nutrient-rich Food Grounds. Once the bin is full, members can schedule a pickup for the food grounds using the Mill app. The company turns the food grounds into a chicken feed ingredient.

Mill’s founder and chief executive Matt Rogers says the system “makes it easy to do the right thing”. He explains: “Food isn’t trash. But until today, it was hard to do anything except throw uneaten food in the garbage. The Mill Membership is a simple way to keep food out of landfills, send it back to farms, and make your kitchen smell awesome. Resources are increasingly scarce – wasting food at home is a solvable problem that we can tackle together.”

Mill is currently working through the necessary scientific and regulatory processes to turn the food grounds into a safe and nutritious chicken feed ingredient.

 

Longer-lasting, self-healing concrete

The ancient Romans were master builders. While many modern concrete structures have crumbled in just a few decades, many Roman structures are still standing, including the Pantheon, which has the world’s largest unreinforced concrete dome and was completed in 128 CE. Roman concrete has been known to withstand earthquakes and harsh weather, and certain variations could even set underwater. Until now, exactly what made Roman concrete so durable has remained something of a mystery.

But now, a team of researchers from MIT, Harvard University, and laboratories in Italy and Switzerland, has discovered some of the ancient concrete-manufacturing strategies used by the Romans. They found that Roman concrete contains ‘lime clasts’ – tiny minerals originating from lime that give the concrete the ability to self-heal. Spectroscopic examination also suggested that the Romans used lime in its more reactive form – quicklime.

The researchers concluded that the process of incorporating quicklime, known as hot mixing, was key to the concrete’s durability. During hot mixing, the lime clasts develop a ‘nanoparticle architecture’. When cracked, this reacts with water to create a calcium-saturated solution, which then recrystallises as calcium carbonate and quickly fills the crack.

The team is now working to commercialize this formula. If successful, the more durable concrete could reduce the environmental impact of cement production, as concrete structures will not need to be replaced so quickly.

 

 


 

 

Source edie

 

Tesco pulls forward target to halve food waste

Tesco pulls forward target to halve food waste

Tesco has accelerated its plans for halving food waste in operations, bringing the commitment’s deadline forward from 2030 to 2025.

The supermarket first set the target five years ago, in alignment with target 12.3 of the UN Sustainable Development Goals’ (SDGs). It set a baseline year of the 2016/17 financial year.

By the end of the 2021/22 financial year, the business had delivered a 45% reduction in operational food waste against this baseline. Given that it was, therefore, on track to exceed the 2030 target, it has pulled the deadline forward to 2025.

Actions which Tesco has already taken to reduce food waste in its operations have included forging partnerships with FareShare and OLIO to divert surplus food to communities; diverting surplus food not fit for human consumption to suppliers that can use it for animal feed; stocking ‘wonky’ produce to help reduce waste on farms and allowing store staff to take home foods approaching their use-by dates for free.

 

Tesco has been reporting food waste data since 2013 and was the first UK supermarket to do so

 

Tesco has also moved this week to link executive pay to the delivery of the accelerated target. It had already linked a quarter of the Performance Share Plan awards Executive Directors receive to progress on other key environmental and social targets, including those on emissions and on gender and ethnicity representation. Now, food waste will be added.

Tesco Group’s chief executive Ken Murphy said he hopes that the changes will “drive further transformative change”.

He also called on other businesses to follow suit, and for policymaking to raise the bar across the UK’s grocery sector. Murphy said: “The work we and our suppliers do won’t tackle the issue alone. We have long called for Government to introduce mandatory food waste reporting to help measure and judge if real action is happening. Action must be taken across the whole industry.”

Tesco is notably working with Defra on its ‘Step Up To The Plate’ pledge, which helps businesses and individuals align with SDG 12.3 and provides a platform for Ministers to receive recommendations for targeted policy support.

The pledge requires corporate signatories to adopt WRAP’s food waste reduction roadmap. The framework, built in partnership with charity IGD, sets out how organisations can measure and act on wastage levels across a “farm-to-fork” approach.

But, as Murphy said, the business wants the UK Government to go further and mandate that supermarkets publicly publish their food waste data in a uniform fashion.

 


 

Source edie

Food rescue feeds the hungry and cuts greenhouse gas emissions

Food rescue feeds the hungry and cuts greenhouse gas emissions

Feeding people in need was the main aim of Northland Food Rescue/Whakaora Kai Taitokerau when the organisation was first seeded in Whangārei in 2016.

But the benefits to the environment – by removing methane-producing food from landfills – quickly became obvious, community development worker Carol Peters​ said.

The organisation now receives food, which would normally go to landfill, from 35 suppliers, including supermarkets, cafes, growers and packhouses across most of Tai Tokerau.

 

Northland Food Rescue manager Peter Nicholas says Northland Food Rescue/Whakaora Kai Taitokerau is successful because it both feeds the hungry and reduces greenhouse gas emissions by saving food from landfill. DAVID WHITE / STUFF

 

The food is all weighed, so reductions in greenhouse gas emissions can be calculated.

It is then sorted and listed on a secure online “shop” so distributors – including churches, schools and food banks – can select which kai their clients need.

The scale of the operation means in the last year alone it saved 108 tonnes of food from going to waste, creating 305,000 meals and reducing 121 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions.

Manager Peter Nicholas​ said 97 per cent of the donated food is perfectly edible, it just can’t be sold because of imperfections or expiry dates.

“It is a fault of our food supply system; it is usually perfectly edible food that can be distributed to people in need.

 

Northland Food Rescue has an online “shop” so distributors can select their food. David White / STUFF

 

“When there is food insecurity in this country, it makes no sense to be chucking food out.”

Food not fit for human consumption is fed to pigs or composted.

But most of the time, the food can be used with a bit of know-how, such as using fruit past its best in baking, Nicholas said.

Northland Food Rescue is run by 155 Whare Āwhina Community Houses, and its distributors include the organisation’s food bank and centre for homeless people, Open Arms.

 

Peter Nicholas says Northland Food Rescue has created 305,000 meals out of donated food in the past year, reducing 121 tonnes of greenhouse gas emissions. David White / STUFF

 

Another charity which benefits is Soul Food, which makes hot meals for the homeless and hungry once a week, as well as distributing food parcels.

Co-founder Chris Youens​ said Northland Food Rescue supplied quite a lot of Soul Food’s needs, especially the fresh produce important for a healthy diet.

“We get all sorts of produce through them which helps us make our meals on Monday nights,” he said.

Northland Food Rescue was about to move to a bigger warehouse in Whangārei and was trying to encourage more suppliers to donate unwanted food, Nicholas said.

“There is a lot more that could be rescued. Even after all these years of operating, it is still just the tip of the iceberg.”

Peters believed more produce could be rescued if people volunteered to help pick food or pick up tree fall.

It would help if New Zealand introduced a law to stop the likes of supermarkets from throwing waste food to landfill, as France did in 2016, she said.

But the organisation was also looking at a sweetener for suppliers: Investigating if carbon credits could be given to suppliers for their reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, Peters said.

 


 

Source STUFF