AWARD YEAR
2023
CATEGORY
Home
GOALS
Responsible Consumption & Production
KEYWORDS
food waste, cement, Building materials, Construction
COUNTRY
Japan
DESIGNED BY
Kota Machida and Yuya Sakai
WEBSITE
https://mainichi.jp/english/articles/20220601/p2g/00m/0sc/048000c
Food Waste Cement
Transforming food waste into potentially edible cement
How does it work?
Yuya Sakai, an associate professor of Industrial Science at Tokyo University and his student Kota Machida say they have successfully made cement using tea leaves, orange and onion peels, coffee grounds, Chinese cabbage, and even lunchbox leftovers. The food cement can be reused and is biodegradable, so it can be buried when it is no longer needed.
Why is it needed?
Food waste is a huge problem in Japan and worldwide. Japan produced around 5.7 million tons of edible food waste in 2019 and the government aims to reduce that around 2.7 million tons by 2030.
How does it improve life?
According to Machida, their "ultimate hope is that this cement replaces plastic and cement products, which have worse environmental impacts."