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Packaging environmental impact on seafood supply chains: A review of life cycle assessment studies

Journal of Industrial Ecology 2021 43 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, Cheila Almeida, Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, David Baptista de Sousa, Jara Laso, Philippe Loubet, Cheila Almeida, António Marques, Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, Philippe Loubet, Jara Laso, María Margallo, Jara Laso, Philippe Loubet, Paula Quinteiro, Jara Laso, Ana Cláudia Dias, Jara Laso, Paula Quinteiro, María Margallo, María Margallo, Guido Sonnemann, Jara Laso, Jara Laso, Tamíris Pacheco da Costa, Paula Quinteiro, Eoghan Clifford, María Leonor Nunes, Guido Sonnemann, António Marques, Neil J. Rowan, Jara Laso, António Marques, António Marques, María Margallo, David Baptista de Sousa, María Margallo, Paula Quinteiro, Paula Quinteiro, María Margallo, Paula Quinteiro, António Marques, António Marques, António Marques, Rubén Aldaco Rubén Aldaco António Marques, António Marques, Ana Cláudia Dias, Ana Cláudia Dias, María Leonor Nunes, António Marques, Ana Cláudia Dias, Ronan Cooney, António Marques, Sinead Mellett, António Marques, António Marques, Rubén Aldaco Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, María Leonor Nunes, Cheila Almeida, Cheila Almeida, Guido Sonnemann, António Marques, António Marques, António Marques, María Leonor Nunes, Carlos J. Rodríguez, António Marques, Neil J. Rowan, Philippe Loubet, Eoghan Clifford, Israel Ruiz‐Salmón, Philippe Loubet, António Marques, Guido Sonnemann, María Margallo, Philippe Loubet, Guido Sonnemann, Ronan Cooney, Ronan Cooney, Rubén Aldaco Guido Sonnemann, María Leonor Nunes, Eoghan Clifford, Eoghan Clifford, Ronan Cooney, Neil J. Rowan, Ana Cláudia Dias, Eoghan Clifford, António Marques, David Baptista de Sousa, Neil J. Rowan, Neil J. Rowan, Rubén Aldaco Sinead Mellett, Rubén Aldaco Rubén Aldaco

Summary

This review assessed the environmental impact of packaging in seafood supply chains through life cycle assessment studies, finding that packaging contributes a relatively minor but non-negligible share of climate change impact while also playing an indirect role in reducing seafood loss and waste.

Abstract Packaging is fundamental for food preservation and transportation but generates an environmental burden from its production and end‐of‐life management. This review evaluates packaging contribution to the environmental performance of seafood products. Life cycle assessment (LCA) studies were evaluated by both qualitative and quantitative analysis. The qualitative analysis assessed how direct (e.g., packaging material) and indirect impacts (e.g., influence on seafood loss and waste) have been considered, while the quantitative analysis evaluated packaging contribution to products’ weight and climate change impact. Qualitative analysis revealed that seafood LCAs focus mainly on direct environmental impacts arising from packaging materials, for which some articles conducted sensitivity analysis to assess materials substitution. Recycling was found to be the most common recommendation to diminish direct potential environmental impacts arising from packaging end‐of‐life. However, standardized recovery rates and other end‐of‐life options (e.g., reuse), should be considered. Quantitative analysis revealed that cans' production contributes significantly to the overall climate change impact for canned products. On average, it contributes to 42% of a product's climate change impact and 27% of a product's weight. Packaging has a lower contribution when considering freezing, chilling, and other post‐harvesting processing. It represents on average less than 5% of a product's climate change impact (less than 1 kg CO 2 eq/kg) and 6% of a product's weight. Packaging material production is more relevant to aluminum, tinplate, and glass than for plastic and paper. Therefore, it is essential to accurately include these materials and their associated processes in inventories to improve the environmental assessment of seafood products.

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