2019
DOI: 10.3390/foods8070229
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Valorization of Tomato Surplus and Waste Fractions: A Case Study Using Norway, Belgium, Poland, and Turkey as Examples

Abstract: There is a large potential in Europe for valorization in the vegetable food supply chain. For example, there is occasionally overproduction of tomatoes for fresh consumption, and a fraction of the production is unsuited for fresh consumption sale (unacceptable color, shape, maturity, lesions, etc.). In countries where the facilities and infrastructure for tomato processing is lacking, these tomatoes are normally destroyed, used as landfilling or animal feed, and represent an economic loss for producers and neg… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…The daily amount of tomato extract administered to the rats was quite high, corresponding roughly to 100 g of fresh tomatoes per day. This may make it feasible to recover waste products of the tomato processing industry [41] to prepare dietary supplements to combine daily with a healthy diet and lifestyle.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The daily amount of tomato extract administered to the rats was quite high, corresponding roughly to 100 g of fresh tomatoes per day. This may make it feasible to recover waste products of the tomato processing industry [41] to prepare dietary supplements to combine daily with a healthy diet and lifestyle.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Over 130 million tons are processed every year, and approximately eight million tons represent the waste generated as estimated by the World Processing Tomato Council (WPTC) [ 3 ]. In fact, a considerable number of produced tomatoes are not suitable for fresh consumption due to unacceptable color, maturity, or shape, thus representing an economic loss for producers and a negative environmental impact [ 4 ]. Additionally, large quantities of tomato peel residues are generated from the processing industry.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among the market products, tomatoes were by far the main vegetable product, with 16.6 million tons and occupying 10% of the total vegetable cultivated area, with Spain and Italy as major producers (60% of the total produced volume) [ 6 , 7 ]. After harvesting, this crop generates annually over 3 million metric tons of waste [ 8 ], mainly including plant waste (leaves and branches generated from pruning and maintenance operation, as well as the main stem, branches, and leaves collected at the end of the growing cycle) and the discarded tomatoes that do not meet the required quality standards for sale. In the particular case of Almería, Spain, where more than 75% of the country’s total greenhouse production occurs, the amount of tomato plant waste comes to around 470,000 tons/year, considering both data from the area for growing tomato in greenhouse crop and the estimated value of waste generation (49 t tomato plant waste per ha) [ 9 ].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%