If ‘food waste’
was a country it would be ranked as the third largest emitter of greenhouse gas
emissions in the world behind only China and the United States. To reach this conclusion the World Resources
Institute used food waste data in 2011, and considered
agriculture inputs, food processing, land use, deforestation, food waste
disposal, and landfill impacts.
The carbon
footprint of wasted food is a big one with cereals contributing about 35% of
the greenhouse gas emissions even though is only about 19% of food waste
volume. Meat on the other hand is a
small part of the food waste problem as it is not thrown away with as much
frequency. However, producing food for
meat animals, handling animal manure, and all those belching cows cause meat to
contribute as much as 20% of food waste emissions.
It is a messy
business, but many believe discarded food should be considered a valuable
resource and not waste. The World Resources Institute reports that food
waste in 2014 was estimated to hold a total of 2,142 petajoules of discarded
energy, which is about 8% of the energy consumed annually around the globe. As the world frets over global warming and
the harm caused by combusting fossil fuels, it seems like an 8% contribution to
energy needs makes a great deal of sense.
North Carolina Waste-to-Energy Facility |
Blue Sphere (BLSP:
Nasdaq) operates waste-to-energy
facilities in the U.S., Italy and The Netherlands. Blue Sphere scrounges the country side for
what others consider waste, including food scraps, rejected produce, agriculture straw, livestock
manure, and municipal waste. The company
uses industrial scale digesters to convert the organic material to electricity
that is sold to local utilities through power purchase agreements. Solid materials are converted to soil amendments
and sold to local landscapers or farms.
Blue Sphere
missed several deadlines in getting its North Carolina and Rhode Island
operation up and running. Investors were
justifiably disappointed with the pace of progress. However, Blue Sphere engineers finally got
the digesters and generators for both projects going in late 2016. The North Carolina plant is rated at 5.2
megawatts and Rhode Island is 3.2 megawatts.
The company is currently developing on yet another plant in The
Netherlands that will produce biofuel and soil amendments. The acquisition of five small waste-to-energy
plants in Italy helped jump start aggregate electricity output for the
company.
Investors who
want to put capital into a food waste solution may find Blue Sphere an unpalatable
choice. The company stopped filing
financial reports with the SEC in 2018 and its stock trades at sub-penny
levels. Despite its operational
struggles and lack of success as a public company, Blue Sphere has proven that food
waste has a value in energy production and that it is possible to reduce the
massive economic drain that is created by the ‘cult of perfection’ that leads
to a loss of 40% of the value in the
food supply chain.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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