Land availability is a critical and limiting factor for the global biofuel production from energy crops, especially in regions with high population density like in Europe. Land is a finite resource and the main competitors are Feed, Food & Fuel. From the available worldwide arable land almost 2/3 is dedicated to animal feed, less than 1/3 to food and only small share to biofuels. The multiple uttered food vs fuel debate is actually a food vs feed debate. On the one hand, the increasing land demand for energy crops leads to direct and indirect Land Use Change (iLUC), causing deforestation, soil erosion, loss of biodiversity and vital water resources. On the other hand, there is a significant area of land which is contaminated and therefore unusable for any purpose. Soil pollution is omnipresent and in Europe about 2.5 Mio suspected sites exist, of which about 600,000 are officially registered. Even worse, the exploration, registration as contaminated site as well as the management are very cost-intensive. Soil pollution degrades major ecosystem services provided by soils. This directly affects human and environmental health, and it reduces food and water safety. The method of phytoremediation consists of the use of plants and their associated microbes to stabilize, degrade, volatilize and extract soil pollutants. While it is considered a cost-effective and environmentally friendly method, there has been still no significant commercial application demonstrated. One of the most important remaining hurdles is the disposal of large amounts of contaminated (e.g. heavy metals) biomass which is currently treated as waste and end up in incineration plants or disposed in landfills, an economic unattractive option. The lack of innovation in the utilization of contaminated biomass is evident and is fully addressed in the project. The Phy2Climate approach synergistically interlinks the remediation of contaminated soil with the production of added value products applying a thermo catalytic biorefinery process. The overall objective is to build a bridge between the phytoremediation of contaminated land with the production of clean drop-in biofuels without iLUC. Phy2Climate will decontaminate lands from a vast variety of pollutants and make the restored lands available for agriculture, while improving the overall sustainability, legal frame and economics of the process.