Fast Company

PEEL APPEAL

How fruit-and-vegetable processor Baldor is transforming food waste into a big business

Every week, a million pounds of produce is plucked from farms all over the country and delivered to Baldor’s 172,000-square-foot facility in the Bronx, where it is washed, chopped, and packaged before being trucked to grocery stores and restaurants. In the past, the trimmings—carrot peels, strawberry tops, onion skins, and so forth—were brought to a landfill and composting facility, amounting to 150,000 pounds of waste per week. That changed

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Fast Company

Fast Company2 min readRobotics
Automating Dirty And Dangerous Work
THERE'S A long history of robots taking jobs that humans resent, resist, or outright fear. But a new crop of bots is tackling tasks that even machines might calculate to be out of their theoretical comfort zones. Gecko Robotics has been deploying its
Fast Company1 min read
27 Mill Industries
A MAJOR CLImate change culprit is hiding in your kitchen: food scraps. Apple cores, carrot tops, and uneaten bits of dinner are a surprisingly potent source of emissions, spewing methane as they decompose in landfills. Mill, a stylish garbage bin (re
Fast Company5 min readIntelligence (AI) & Semantics
1 1 the Power Broker
FOR BRINGING THE CHIPS TO THE AI PARTY I'M CHAT TING WITH NVIDIA CEO JENSEN HUANG AT the chip giant's Silicon Valley headquarters, where one of its DGX H100 computing modules sits partially disassembled before us. Stuffed with blazingly fast processo

Related Books & Audiobooks