An Eco-industrial Park Design Using Industrial Symbiosis Approach for Optimization of Value Creation in Coffee Agroindustry
Date
2024Author
Laili, Nur
Indrasti, Nastiti Siswi
Yani, Mohamad
Djatna, Taufik
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The coffee agroindustry in Indonesia plays a significant economic role as the third
largest coffee producer worldwide. Despite the high economic contribution, the
coffee agroindustry also raises environmental issues along its supply chain. Coffee
solid waste constitutes biomass containing useful compounds promising as raw
materials for added-value products through the implementation of industrial
symbiosis. Eco-industrial parks create value through industrial symbiosis,
emphasizing the principle of a closed-loop production system, simultaneously
decreasing the use of raw materials and waste. This study aimed to analyze and
develop a coffee-based eco-industrial park design via a systems engineering
approach and optimization of industrial symbiosis in closed-loop coffee production.
This study employed a case study in the Ketakasi coffee-producing center in
Jember, Indonesia. Data collection was conducted through field observation and a
series of in-depth interviews. The development of eco-industrial park design used
model-based system engineering method, as demonstrated through functional,
logical, and physical architectures. Subsequently, the optimization of industrial
symbiosis within eco-industrial parks was realized using a mixed-integer linear
programming mathematical model. The eco-industrial park design presents the
actors, internal business processes, material and data exchanges, various actors’
interdependence and critical roles in material exchanges, and value creation
processes using valorization within the eco-industrial park. The role of the Ketakasi
cooperative as a facilitator of material exchange and manager of the eco-industrial
park is pivotal. The utilization of data integration enhances the transparency and
efficiency of information exchange among eco-industrial park participants,
promoting predictability and reliability in material exchange. The application of the
mixed-integer linear programming optimization model has provided a structured
approach to maximizing the value creation within the eco-industrial park through
the valorization of 72.3 percent of coffee pulp and 68.5 percent of spent coffee
grounds into cellulase enzymes and ultraviolet shields. This study presents a
structured framework for efficiently managing material exchange processes within
an eco-industrial park, contributing to environmental sustainability and economic
value creation. This study contributes to the knowledge gap in the literature by
developing an inclusive eco-industrial park design that facilitates the optimization
of the value creation process through valorization technology. This study also adds
to sustainable agriculture management literature through a coffee-based ecoindustrial
park design.