Tomato peels and seeds (TP) are the most abundant canning industry waste actually used to produce biogas. TP is rich in lycopene (lyc) and represent a more sustainable feedstock than tomato fruits actually employed. It was therefore chosen as feedstock together with supercritical CO 2 extraction (SFE-CO 2) technology to develop a TP-SFE-CO 2 biorefinery, topic scarcely investigated. Two TP were tested and although TP-SFE-CO 2 parameters were the same, lyc recoveries depended by peel structure changes occurred during pre-SFE-CO 2 drying step. Higher moisture (102.7 g kg-1 wet weight) permitted 97 % lyc recovery and gave a water-in-oil emulsion as extract. Mass balance confirmed that lyc isomerisation did not cause lyc losses. After a significant oil extraction, exhaust TP showed a biodegradability 64% higher than the raw one, attributable to fibre structure disruption. The biorefinery proposed (SFE_CO 2 +anaerobic digestion) determined positive economic revenue (+787.9 € t-1 TP) on the contrary of the actual TP management.