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    Turning waste to wealth: Harnessing the potential of cassava peels for nutritious animal feed

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    Authors
    Okike, Iheanacho
    Wigboldus, Seerp
    Samireddipalle, Anandan
    Naziri, D.
    Adesehinwa, O.K.A.
    Adejoh, A.V.
    Amole, Tunde A.
    Bordoloi, S.
    Kulakow, Peter
    Date Issued
    2022-04
    Language
    en
    Type
    Book Chapter
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Usage rights
    CC-BY-4.0
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Okike, I., Wigboldus, S., Samireddipalle, A., Naziri, D., Adesehinwa, O.K.A., Adejoh, A.V., Amole, T., Bordoloi, S. and Kulakow, P. 2022. Turning waste to wealth: Harnessing the potential of cassava peels for nutritious animal feed. IN: Thiele, G., Friedmann, M., Campos, H., Polar, V. and Bentley, J.W. (eds.). 2022. Root, Tuber and Banana Food System Innovations. Cham: Springer: 173–206.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/119417
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-92022-7_6
    Abstract/Description
    In Nigeria, processing cassava for food and industry yields around 15 million tons of wet peels annually. These peels are usually dumped near processing centres to rot or dry enough to be burned. Rotting heaps release methane into the air and a stinking effluent that pollutes nearby streams and underground water, while burning produces clouds of acrid smoke. However, when properly dried, peels can be an ingredient in animal feed. Previous attempts over two decades to use peels in animal feed failed to yield profitable options for drying wet peels at commercial scale, but recent research suggests that cassava peels can be processed into high-quality cassava peel (HQCP) products to be used as nutritious, low-cost animal feed ingredients. The core innovation was to adopt the same steps and equipment used for processing cassava roots into gari, the main staple food in the country. When dried, 3 tons of wet peels yield a tonne of healthy and energy-rich animal feed, containing nearly 3,000 kilocalories per kilogram of dry matter (kcal/kgDM). Adopting this innovation at scale in Nigeria’s poultry and fish sectors alone has the potential to turn approximately 3.6 million tons of wet peels into 1.2 million tons of feed ingredients capable of replacing approximately 810,000 tons of largely imported maize. The innovation has great potential to increase feed availability and lower its cost while saving cereals for human consumption, reducing the import bill, creating new business opportunities, and protecting the environment. This research was initiated by CGIAR centres and taken up by the CGIAR Research Program on Roots, Tubers and Bananas (RTB) over the past decade with strategic input from the CGIAR Research Program on Livestock to accelerate development of the innovation, and this chapter documents the potential and progress in taking this innovation to scale.
    CGIAR Author ORCID iDs
    Iheanacho Okikehttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7059-8595
    Peter Kulakowhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-7574-2645
    CGIAR Action Areas
    Resilient Agrifood Systems
    CGIAR Initiatives
    Sustainable Animal Productivity
    Other CGIAR Affiliations
    Roots, Tubers and Bananas
    AGROVOC Keywords
    cassava; animal feeding; feeds; small and medium enterprises
    Subjects
    AGRICULTURE; ANIMAL FEEDING; CROP-LIVESTOCK; FEEDS; FODDER; FORAGES;
    Countries
    Nigeria
    Regions
    Africa; Western Africa
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Institute of Tropical Agriculture; Wageningen University & Research; Indian Council of Agricultural Research; International Potato Center; Obafemi Awolowo University; Synergos Nigeria; International Livestock Research Institute; Amo Farm Sieberer Hatchery Ltd, Nigeria
    Investors/sponsors
    CGIAR Trust Fund
    Collections
    • CGIAR Initiative on Sustainable Animal Productivity [351]
    • IITA Books and Book Chapters [950]
    • ILRI feed and forage development program outputs [438]

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