Policy Analysis on Microbial Biomass Value Chains

Authors

  • Jelizaveta Palcevska Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia
  • Kushan Pasantha Gamini Gamage Akuratiya Gamage Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia
  • Krista Laktuka Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia
  • Valdis Vītoliņš Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia
  • Ilze Vamza Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia
  • Dagnija Blumberga Institute of Energy Systems and Environment, Riga Technical University, Riga, Latvia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7250/CONECT.2025.088

Keywords:

Alternative protein source, biomass value chains, microbial biomass, policy review, regulatory framework

Abstract

Alternative protein sources as a means for fighting food insecurity have become more prevalent in various initiatives. Nevertheless, there are only a few cases with actual microbial food and feed production on an industrial scale. The overall landscape is developing, but as there are very few functional plants, it is not clear whether the regulatory framework is robust enough to ensure product safety and whether the regulatory framework does not include any unnecessary hurdles for alternative food and feed to reach the market. In this paper, a content analysis was performed of various European Level documents referred to microbial biomass value chains, including the potential substrates of agro-industrial sources. The literature sources were gathered using a snow-balling approach and further analysis was done on a keyword basis screening the documents for corresponding paragraphs. Quantitative sorting was done by assessing the keyword count, document types, and timeline. As a result, regulatory gaps and hurdles for microbial biomass production from agro-industrial side streams were elucidated.

Supporting Agencies
The work has been developed by the Fundamental and Applied Research Project “Herbicides as tool for selection of edible protein-rich mutants”, project No. lzp-2022/1-0126, funded by the Latvian Council of Science.

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Published

09.05.2025

Issue

Section

Environmental and Energy Policies and Frameworks

How to Cite

Policy Analysis on Microbial Biomass Value Chains. (2025). CONECT. International Scientific Conference of Environmental and Climate Technologies, 146. https://doi.org/10.7250/CONECT.2025.088