University Don Advises On Food Waste

By: Tunde Akanbi, Ilorin

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A Professor in the Department of Microbiology of the University of Ilorin, Kwara State, North Central, Nigeria, Patricia Omojasola has lamented that Nigeria generates 8.9 metric tons of Agrifood wastes every year.

The Don disclosed this in Ilorin during her paper presentation at the 261st Inaugural Lecture of the University entitled: “Micro-organism in the Service of Man”.

According to her, “large amount of wastes are generated every year from the processing of crops and animals. Agrifoods wastes represents the edible and inedible residual biogenic fractions of crops, animal commodities and products,” she said.

The don who teaches in the Faculty of Life Sciences of the University, postulated that these wastes are either converted to animal feed, burned or left to rot in heaps.

Environmental pollution

She observed that these wastes constitute a nuisance and a source of pollution to the environment.

Omojasola listed some of the common wastes to include cassava peel, rice, sorghum and wheat bran, corn corb, oil palm-fruit empty brunch and empty African mesquite pods among others.

She asserted that approximately 33.33 percent of food that is produced for utilisation is wasted and fritted away on a global level.

“This is estimated as a loss of 1.3 billion metric tons per annum. These includes 30 percent cereal, 20 percent dairy products, 35 percent seafoods and fish, 45 percent fruits and vegetables and 20 percent meat,” she said.

Preservation strategies

The expert stated that these wastes being rich in carbohydrates, protein, fats and minerals makes them suitable substrates via microbial-biotransformation for production of value-added products such as bioplastic, bio fertilizers, food additives, antioxidants, antibiotics, organics acids ans enzymes.

Omojasola recommended that metabolites produced by each wastes can be done at the sites of each wastes employing simple to operate bioreactors, adding that the product can then be pooled to supply bug industries.

She called on stakeholders collaboration across the food industry, academia and government on effective implementation of food preservation strategies.

 

Olusola Akintonde

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