The challenge is to produce an innovative business plan based on the design for sustainable production of a biorenewable product such as biofuels, biochemicals or biomaterials.
A professional jury will be appointed by BIG-C per country to evaluate the business plans on the following aspects: quality of the proposed design, viability of the business plan, originality of the proposed business idea, sustainability performance and presentation of the plan.
The competition is an initiative of the BioInnovation Growth mega-Cluster (BIG-C) and is open to Master and PhD students in Germany, the Netherlands and Brazil.
The final award of €10.000, will be provided for by industry to help further develop the business plan. Find out more about the competition, including how to enter, here.
]]>Bio-resources such as straw, bark, forest residues and even sunflower husks could hold the key to a more environmentally-friendly European process industry, having the potential to replace fossil-based resources in many product groups, especially in the construction industry.
Bio4Products will demonstrate how these four bio-resources can be exploited, creating renewable and natural alternatives to fossil-based processing streams such as bitumen, phenols and creosote.
The objective is to deliver four end products for which at least 30% of the original fossil material is substituted with sustainable resources, and which can demonstrate a 75% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.
A state-of-the-art technique called fast pyrolysis will be employed which transforms biomass into a flexible bio-oil in a matter of seconds. This oil will then be separated into fractions which can be used for the production of roofing material, resins (phenolic and sand moulding), and engineered wood and natural fibre reinforced products. As well as an environmental impact assessment, the project will conduct economic and market analyses to develop a strong business case for its products.
Bio4Products will see a unique blend of organisations and expertise working together, led by BTG Biomass Technology Group from the Netherlands. Industrial partners from Belgium and Germany will demonstrate the viability of the new value chains, with support from expert partners in the United Kingdom and Belgium. The project, which began in September and will run for four years, is funded by the Sustainable Process Industry through Resource and Energy Efficiency (SPIRE) programme, a contractual public-private partnership under the EU framework programme Horizon 2020.
]]>The cluster organisation will support and promote the development of the biobased economy in Flanders and be the point of contact both for relevant companies based in the region, and abroad.
FBBV wants to focus on the creation of new industrial clusters, following the example of the biorefinery cluster in the Rodenhuizedok in the port of Ghent. A number of potential production routes, such as the conversion of sugars, fibrous feedstocks or waste gases into biobased products and chemicals will be investigated.
The cluster is an evolution of the Ghent Bio-Energy Valley, originally founded in 2005 to boost biofuel production in the territory. Today, the Ghent region is responsible for 90% of the total Flemish biofuel production, and the cluster has subsequently expanded its field of activity to all biobased economy domains.
To learn more about the Flanders Biobased Valley visit their webpage.
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