id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt cord-266746-c0urbl6l Hicks, T.M. Protein-Rich By-Products: Production Statistics, Legislative Restrictions, and Management Options 2016-08-19 .txt text/plain 6279 296 48 Overall, increased global demand for animal-based products requires a substantially greater increase in plant and other feed resources, which will subsequently generate a much larger volume of protein-rich materials than currently produced. Since then, concern over the risks posed by ABPs, including infectious diseases (such as swine fever, foot and mouth) and other contaminants (such as dioxins), to human and animal health, has resulted in strict regulations regarding their safe handling and disposal (cunningham, 2003 ; department for environment Food and rural Affairs, 2011). As such, most countries now have local regulations put in place that are typically broad in scope and directly affect any person or business that generates, uses, disposes, stores, handles, or transports food waste containing animal products and ABPs derived from the food processing industry. The regulations also control the use of ABPs as feed, fertilizer, and technical products with rules for their transformation via composting and biogas operations and their disposal via rendering and incineration (department for environment Food and rural Affairs, 2011). ./cache/cord-266746-c0urbl6l.txt ./txt/cord-266746-c0urbl6l.txt