Towards Sustainable Production of Sesame Products: Comparison of Traditional and Modern Production Systems Via a Life Cycle Assessment Approach

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Date

2024

Authors

Üçtuğ, Fehmi Görkem

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Publisher

Elsevier Ltd

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

No

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Top 10%

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Abstract

Burgeoning ecological crises of food production sector has made the environmental impact evaluation of various food products a sustainability imperative. Specifically, in pursuit of identifying a sustainable production model of high-demand food items, implementing a comparative life cycle assessment of various production approaches is of paramount importance. The energy consumption and environmental impacts of manufacturing two popular sesame products, Tahini (milled sesame paste) and Halva (sweetened sesame paste) in Iran was realized by using life cycle assessment methodology. In this regard, two production systems of traditional and modern, based on sesame cultivation and processing seeds were modeled. Moreover, production of milling stone, as the main instrument in Tahini and Halva production, was evaluated within the boundary of each product system. The highest energy used pattern and carbon footprint were attributed to the traditionally produced Tahini with 89.3 MJ/kg and 12.4 kg CO2eq/kg respectively; while, the lowest results were associated with modern-based Halva production with 47.8 MJ/kg and 5.4 kg CO2eq/kg. Compared to the traditional method, modern production of tahini was found to increase acidification potential and ozone layer depletion potential the most, with 73.1 g SO2eq and 0.735 mg R11eq respectively. Production of milling stone was the predominant hotspot for all products in traditional and modern systems, with average of 56% and 45% contribution to the total energy used, and 75% and 71% contribution to the carbon footprint of products in the former and latter systems respectively. Moreover, implementation of agrivoltaics system and circular economy-based milling stone as the alternative scenarios were evaluated from LCA perspective, which demonstrated that adoption of alternative milling stone could reduce the impact results significantly. It is believed that the novel evaluation framework of this study could serve as an example for future LCA studies to expand the common routine of evaluation and include production of instrument within the product's system boundary. © 2024 The Authors

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Keywords

Environmental impact, Halva, Life cycle assessment, Milling stone, Sesame, Tahini production, Environmental effects of industries and plants, Halva, Economic growth, development, planning, TD194-195, Tahini production, Environmental impact, Life cycle assessment, Milling stone, HD72-88, Sesame

Fields of Science

0211 other engineering and technologies, 02 engineering and technology, 0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering

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Cleaner and Responsible Consumption

Volume

12

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CrossRef : 3

Scopus : 3

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Mendeley Readers : 57

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3

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3

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8

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13

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