The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union

The European Parliament Resolution of 2012 on the Resource Efficient Europe 2020 Programmed has stimulated the analysis proposed in this document. In particular, the paper takes its cue from the planned initiatives regarding the circular transition of the economy, i.e. the minimization of waste and...

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Main Authors: Zarbà Carla, La Via Giovanni, Pappalardo Gioacchino, Hamam Manal Samir Mustafa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2020-05-01
Series:AIMS Agriculture and Food
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/agrfood.2020.1.54/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-32a67fb787b34516ab9d74f464964da02020-11-25T03:33:18ZengAIMS PressAIMS Agriculture and Food2471-20862020-05-0151547510.3934/agrfood.2020.1.54The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European UnionZarbà Carla0La Via Giovanni1Pappalardo Gioacchino2Hamam Manal Samir Mustafa3Department of Agriculture, Food and Environment (Di3A) of the University of CataniaDepartment of Agriculture, Food and Environment (Di3A) of the University of CataniaDepartment of Agriculture, Food and Environment (Di3A) of the University of CataniaDepartment of Agriculture, Food and Environment (Di3A) of the University of CataniaThe European Parliament Resolution of 2012 on the Resource Efficient Europe 2020 Programmed has stimulated the analysis proposed in this document. In particular, the paper takes its cue from the planned initiatives regarding the circular transition of the economy, i.e. the minimization of waste and environmental impacts generated by the use of materials and resources. The analysis takes as a reference the algae for human consumption that the EU includes among the first products recognized as “Novel food” within the food or ingredients of non-EU origin consumed in a non-significant way before 1997 (Regulation (EC) 258/1997) [1]. Assuming the sustainability of human consumption of algae, our paper aims to identify elements of physical and economic measurement of circularity in the supply phase of the initial production cycle. The prevalent extraEuropean origin of the algal virgin matter suggested to determine such as indicator the “balance of the resource” from the trade quotas extra EU of algae (Primary raw materials) and of the relative first food derivatives, i.e. agar agar and carrageenan (Secondary raw materials). This is in view of the fact that the European Commission considers the trade quotas as information of the measurability of the circularity of resources at the macro level (country system). The results obtained in our analysis, through the indices of sectoral specialization, show-interesting levels of sustainability of algae by member country. While by positive results of recent years of the material trade balance and the economic trade balance, emerge appropriate elements of the measurability of the circularity of the food sector under examination. These results confirm that business around the algae sector in the European Union shows virtuous processes regarding economic, social and environmental sustainability. These data are also preparatory to the launch of further analyses of different structural levels of the sector itself. In fact, the measurability of the circularity that the document proposes consists of an approach that combine with other tools for assessing the country system. Tools whit, as a whole, however must have a point of convergence with the evaluation of the economic and environmental sustainability of the micro reference systems (algae chains systems), with their own balance of circularity and from the perspective of governance processes of circularity of resources.https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/agrfood.2020.1.54/fulltext.htmlnovel foodalgae fit for human consumptioncircular economytrade
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zarbà Carla
La Via Giovanni
Pappalardo Gioacchino
Hamam Manal Samir Mustafa
spellingShingle Zarbà Carla
La Via Giovanni
Pappalardo Gioacchino
Hamam Manal Samir Mustafa
The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
AIMS Agriculture and Food
novel food
algae fit for human consumption
circular economy
trade
author_facet Zarbà Carla
La Via Giovanni
Pappalardo Gioacchino
Hamam Manal Samir Mustafa
author_sort Zarbà Carla
title The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
title_short The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
title_full The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
title_fullStr The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
title_full_unstemmed The sustainability of Novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “Algae fit for human consumption” in European Union
title_sort sustainability of novel foods in the transition phase to the circular economy; the trade “algae fit for human consumption” in european union
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Agriculture and Food
issn 2471-2086
publishDate 2020-05-01
description The European Parliament Resolution of 2012 on the Resource Efficient Europe 2020 Programmed has stimulated the analysis proposed in this document. In particular, the paper takes its cue from the planned initiatives regarding the circular transition of the economy, i.e. the minimization of waste and environmental impacts generated by the use of materials and resources. The analysis takes as a reference the algae for human consumption that the EU includes among the first products recognized as “Novel food” within the food or ingredients of non-EU origin consumed in a non-significant way before 1997 (Regulation (EC) 258/1997) [1]. Assuming the sustainability of human consumption of algae, our paper aims to identify elements of physical and economic measurement of circularity in the supply phase of the initial production cycle. The prevalent extraEuropean origin of the algal virgin matter suggested to determine such as indicator the “balance of the resource” from the trade quotas extra EU of algae (Primary raw materials) and of the relative first food derivatives, i.e. agar agar and carrageenan (Secondary raw materials). This is in view of the fact that the European Commission considers the trade quotas as information of the measurability of the circularity of resources at the macro level (country system). The results obtained in our analysis, through the indices of sectoral specialization, show-interesting levels of sustainability of algae by member country. While by positive results of recent years of the material trade balance and the economic trade balance, emerge appropriate elements of the measurability of the circularity of the food sector under examination. These results confirm that business around the algae sector in the European Union shows virtuous processes regarding economic, social and environmental sustainability. These data are also preparatory to the launch of further analyses of different structural levels of the sector itself. In fact, the measurability of the circularity that the document proposes consists of an approach that combine with other tools for assessing the country system. Tools whit, as a whole, however must have a point of convergence with the evaluation of the economic and environmental sustainability of the micro reference systems (algae chains systems), with their own balance of circularity and from the perspective of governance processes of circularity of resources.
topic novel food
algae fit for human consumption
circular economy
trade
url https://www.aimspress.com/article/10.3934/agrfood.2020.1.54/fulltext.html
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