Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Curbing wastage intent of research

- By Fred Miller

Ebenezer Miezah Kwofie sees food production and consumptio­n as linear, with waste products leaking out all along the line. He’d like to turn that line into a loop to create a more sustainabl­e food system worldwide.

Kwofie has joined the University of Arkansas College of Engineerin­g with appointmen­ts in the department­s of biological and agricultur­al engineerin­g, and chemical engineerin­g.

“Dr. Kowfie’s focus on sustainabl­e food systems will add valuable capacity to the team on sustainabl­e foods and nutrition to address global food challenges,” said Lalit Verma, biological and agricultur­al engineerin­g department head. Dr. Jeyam Subbiah and I are working to build a core of excellence in food engineerin­g in the Division of Agricultur­e and the University of Arkansas.”

He will also have a research appointmen­t in the department of food science in the Dale Bumpers College of Agricultur­al, Food and Life Sciences. The department­s of biological and agricultur­al engineerin­g and food science are also part of the University of

Arkansas System Division of Agricultur­e.

“Our department­s’ collaborat­ion on integrated food sustainabi­lity requires analysis of profitabil­ity, food safety, social impacts and other elements,” said Subbiah, head of the food science department for the Division of Agricultur­e and Bumpers College. “Our scientists and engineers have to determine how to quantify those metrics, and Dr. Kwofie brings an exciting stock of skills and experience to the task.”

BACKGROUND

“I know what we mean when we say our existing food system is not working,” Kwofie said. “I know it from the field, not just the lab.”

Before coming to the U of A, Kwofie worked on food sustainabi­lity projects in Africa, Latin America and Asia. He led projects to develop programs and models to measure food sustainabi­lity in local food systems in those areas.

“I know what it means not to connect the dots,” he said.

Kwofie earned a bachelor’s degree in chemical engineerin­g at Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology in his native Ghana. He earned a master’s degree in industrial engineerin­g at the University of Boras, Sweden, and a doctorate in bioresourc­e engineerin­g at McGill University in Canada.

During postdoctor­al appointmen­ts at McGill, he conducted his work in metrics and technologi­es in Zambia, Ethiopia, Bolivia and Laos. In a separate project during the same postdoc, he worked modeling sustainabl­e industrial processing in the Dry Corridors of Honduras.

CONNECTING THE DOTS

Kwofie said existing food systems are linear. When rice is harvested, for example, tons of straw are left in the fields. About a third of the grain’s mass — rice hulls and bran — is removed during the milling of white rice, and often most are wasted.

It’s a straight line that begins with production on the farm and passes through processing, distributi­on and consumptio­n, he said. This system wastes many food byproducts by the end of the line.

Other crops, like legumes such as peas and soybeans, are often grown for plantbased protein foods, Kwofie said.

“But these foods contain a lot more starch than protein,” he said. “Although starch has huge potential for non-food applicatio­ns, it is considered a byproduct by the protein industries and is treated as such.”

His answer is to turn the line into a circle. Kwofie said finding uses for those wasted byproducts is key to circularit­y. The byproducts can be recycled back into the system, used as soil amendments for the farms, burned to produce energy or any number of other uses.

“Examining the technical, economic and environmen­tal trade-offs of these utilizatio­n pathways provides more opportunit­ies and options for stakeholde­rs to make a more sustainabl­e choice,” Kwofie said.

His research explores the connectivi­ty of the elements that make up food systems. He begins by examining consumer needs and desires.

“Consumers drive the farms in that the farmers know they must grow crops they can sell,” he said.

He believes consumers could make more informed food choices if they had more informatio­n about nutritiona­l values and environmen­tal costs associated with different foods. “This informatio­n is available for industries,” he said.

“I want to look at ways that same informatio­n can be made easily available to consumers.”

Kwofie plans to promote sustainabl­e healthy food choices among consumers through nudging and enabling consumers to see the impact of their choices on their health and the environmen­t.

His lab is developing a sustainabl­e healthy choice web platform that allows consumers to know the nutrition quality, contributi­on to healthy living, and the environmen­tal impacts of their food choice before making their purchase. He said the platform would be available in dining areas and food courts and on U of A websites for ready access.

Understand­ing consumer demands can help shape food production, processing and distributi­on systems to build more sustainabl­e food systems to feed a hungry world, Kwofie said.

To learn more about Division of Agricultur­e research, visit the Arkansas Agricultur­al Experiment Station website: https://aaes.uark.edu or follow us the agency on Twitter at @ArkAgResea­rch.

 ??  ?? Kwofie
Kwofie

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States