“…Processes such as calcination (Gu et al 2018), hydrodistillation (Tavares et al 2020), lyophilization (Rubio et al 2020), anaerobic anaerobic digestion (Alrefai et al 2020), extraction (Akond and Lynam 2020), fermentation ( Coimbra et al 2021), enzymatic hydrolysis (Corchado-Lopo et al 2021), hydrothermal liquefaction (Cervi et al 2021), saccharification (Marques and Aguiar-Oliveira 2020), transesterification (Khounani et al 2021b) among others, they are difficult to implement due to the great procedural and technological complexity, which requires greater investment, especially in equipment and infrastructure, making it difficult to implement as a strategy for the use of waste in the Extreme South of Bahia. The simplest processes that facilitate implementation in the region are found in other bioproducts, such as soil corrective using orange peel and sugarcane bagasse (Debernardi-Vázquez et al 2020) for composting, biochar using pie castor bean (Silva et al 2021), sunflower seed (Casoni et al 2019), cherry kernel (Pollard and Goldfarb 2021), filter cake and sugarcane molasses (Bernardino et al 2018;, branches, stems, roots and leaves of trees (Martín et al 2017), oat husk (Srivastava et al 2020), baru endocarp/mesocarp (Rambo et al 2020a;Rambo et al 2020b), coffee and cocoa husks (Milian-Luprón et al 2020) obtained by pyrolysis and briquettes using tree branches, trunks, roots and leaves (Nunes et al 2019;Ponte et al 2019), husk from coconut (Nunes et al 2019) and sugarcane bagasse (Ponte et al 2019) through crushing and compaction.…”