Periodic Reporting for period 1 - BioFlex (Second life of wood: technology to dissolve waste wood to get raw materials)
Berichtszeitraum: 2018-11-01 bis 2019-04-30
Only 50% of the 70M tonnes of European waste wood can currently be recycled, resulting in disposal costs of around £1B annually. In addition, over 1B tonnes of waste biomass are available globally every year in the form of forestry and agricultural residues. These materials can be used as a replacement for crude oil to produce common chemicals, new materials and sustainable fuels. However, effective and economical conversion technologies are required to realise the potential these materials hold.
So called lignocellulosic biomass is comprised of three main polymers: lignin, cellulose and hemicellulose. For its effective valorisation, these three components are to be separated. Cellulose is a widely used material for the production of paper, hygiene products and textiles. Other applications include various packaging materials, films, thickeners, emulsifiers and additives to improve properties of plastics. Lignin hold great promise as a starting material for glues and adhesives or the use in thermoplastics. Hemicellulose can be turned into a variety of bulk and specialty chemicals.
The overall objective of the project was to evaluate the BioFlex process, a chemical technology that separates the three components, for its market potential and to produce a roadmap for its further development. The market potential was to be assessed both for the direct sales of the process outputs (cellulose and lignin) as well as for the purpose of selling the technology (licensing).
Customer engagement was further strengthened with potential licensors of the technology. An engineering documentation was produced for two potential customers and we are now looking to proceed to running technical trials. Internally, a techno economic study was carried out to quantify the benefit of our technology compared to the status quo.
During the project the team was grown to include three engineers, a head of product development cellulose and a head of product development lignin.
A SWOT analysis was carried out and contingencies established where possible. Additionally a freedom to operate search was carried out and the regulatory landscape studied to identify further potential hurdles. Based on the findings, a clear plan was established to move forward, including the conceptual design of a pilot plant, the search for potential pilot plant sites, the search for customers and partners who could co-invest into a pilot plant and the associated funding and time requirements.
We offer the sustainable production of bio-derived products and as such a more environmentally friendly alternative to traditional petrochemicals. Our process will give the bio-renewable industry a much needed low-cost input material and will eventually enable the wider deployment of biodegradable plastics and renewable chemicals.
Since we are diverting wood waste from going to landfill and incineration we reduce methane emissions from landfills and CO2 produced from incinerators. As a result, our process outputs have a very low to negative carbon footprint. There is near zero waste from the process as we focus on recovering all components of the wood in a usable form, including the heavy metals. This also results in much reduced air and soil pollution and improved air quality and will help achieve governmental and industrial waste reduction targets.
Through our technology we can reduce our dependence on oil imports while creating domestic jobs in the cleantech sector.