33
3
Immobilized Enzymes for Bioconversion of Waste to Wealth
Angitha Balan, Vaisiri V. Murthy, and Ravi Kumar Kadeppagari
Centre for Incubation, Innovation, Research and Consultancy (CIIRC), Department of Food Technology, Jyothy
Institute of Technology, Tataguni, Off Kanakapura Main Road, Bangalore, 560082, India
3.1
Introduction
Waste can be defined as an unwanted material which has no value as it is viewed
as unusable material that can be disposed or discarded. At present, we survive
in the world where the exhaustion of resources is going beyond the control. The
production of diverse wastes can lead to severe pollution and environmental
degradation. Solid wastes are unwanted substances that originate from animal
and human activities. Solid wastes can be categorized into biodegradable and
non-biodegradable. Biodegradable wastes can be totally decayed by biological
processes in the presence or absence of oxygen (e.g. kitchen waste, agriculture
waste, animal dung, etc.). Non-biodegradable wastes are meant to be the waste
products which cannot be completely decomposed or decayed. They are mainly
of two types, recyclable and nonrecyclable. Recyclable can be reused or recovered
such as paper, plastic, cloth material, etc. Some of the nonrecyclable wastes are
carbon paper, thermo coal, etc., which does not have an economic value of recovery.
The environmental hazards caused due to increase of wastes can be reduced by
managing wastes appropriately. Different waste management technologies will
definitely favor the planet, and integrated approach in waste management that
include recycling, reuse, and recovery will facilitate the waste reduction.
Waste-to-wealth concept (Figure 3.1) literally means the transformation of waste
to a susceptible or desirable product. The idea of obtaining wealth from waste is
important to ensure that even the poorest countries will also be benefited from all
the waste management technologies. Waste management also led to a major sector
of occupation that provides livelihood to the vast majority in the growing population.
Waste management helps the society on several counts, as mainly it reduces the
pressure induced by the waste on the environment and converts it into wealth. It
helps to bring back the useless or discarded waste into valuable economic products.
It can impact the value of life, and concept of 5Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Recover,
and Refuse) is essential in an integrated approach of waste management.
Biotechnology for Zero Waste: Emerging Waste Management Techniques, First Edition.
Edited by Chaudhery Mustansar Hussain and Ravi Kumar Kadeppagari.
© 2022 WILEY-VCH GmbH. Published 2022 by WILEY-VCH GmbH.