advantages & disadvantages

Advantages

Disadvantages

 

- Can be produced locally and so has social as well as economic benefits


- Cheap to produce


- Uses simple technology and locally available materials


- Requires much less water to grow than vegetables

 

- Stimulates the education of local women about nutrition

- Can be combined with other products (eg rice, etc.) to be made into locally acceptable food products all around the world

- Very effective, contains most essential micronutrients in high concentrations so 1 gram per day can combat malnutrition within a month.

- Very easy to digest

- Very safe, it is resistant to most contamination due to highly alkaline environment

 

- Decentralized production means women need to be trained to produce, use technology, etc.

- They also need to be aided in marketing their product and managing a business.

- Initially more expensive cumbersome to implement than food fortification programmes.

- To cover initial investment, subsidies may still be required.

- Cooking destroys the vitamins and nutrients in Spirulina

 

– so cannot be combined with all foods

 

- Does not combat iodine or folic acid deficiency

 

 

 

Single cell protein by s.s, P.R & M.K