Kitchen Waste Challenge Under the Table / End of Pig-Feeding Era: Unpacking Capacity Gaps and Forging a New Economy
NQ Score
0/100
N1 Content Completeness
9
Key facts
- Kitchen Waste Challenge Under the Table / End of Pig-Feeding Era: Unpacking Capacity Gaps and Forging a New Economy
- Taiwan will completely ban using kitchen waste to feed pigs by 2027, creating a disposal crisis for the food and retail industries. The Environmental Ministry plans to bridge the capacity gap by 2028 using diverse technologies like composting, black soldier flies, and biomass energy, fostering a new 'kitchen waste economy' industrial chain.
- Source: CNA
- Date: Fri Jun 12 2026 11:26:00 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
Taiwan will completely ban using kitchen waste to feed pigs by 2027, creating a disposal crisis for the food and retail industries. The Environmental Ministry plans to bridge the capacity gap by 2028 using diverse technologies like composting, black soldier flies, and biomass energy, fostering a new 'kitchen waste economy' industrial chain.
- Citation
- Kitchen Waste Challenge Under the Table / End of Pig-Feeding Era: Unpacking Capacity Gaps and Forging a New Economy (Fri Jun 12 2026 11:26:00 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), CNA
- Source
- CNA
- Date
- Fri Jun 12 2026 11:26:00 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Taiwan will completely ban using kitchen waste to feed pigs by 2027, creating a disposal crisis for the food and retail industries. The Environmental Ministry plans to bridge the capacity gap by 2028 using diverse technologies like composting, black soldier flies, and biomass energy, fostering a new 'kitchen waste economy' industrial chain.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: Why will Taiwan ban using kitchen waste for pig feed in 2027?
- A: To prevent African Swine Fever. Even if kitchen waste has reuse value, risk reduction is prioritized for animal disease control.
- Q: How will Taiwan's kitchen waste be treated after the ban?
- A: It will gradually shift to composting, black soldier flies, and biomass energy (anaerobic digestion). Incineration will be used temporarily during the transition.
- Q: Will Taiwan have enough processing capacity by 2027?
- A: The Ministry plans for 1,720 tons/day capacity, but about 400 tons will still need incineration. Full alternative capacity is targeted by 2028.