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  4. Sugar-to-What? An Environmental Merit Order Curve for Biobased Chemicals and Plastics
 
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2022
Journal Article
Title

Sugar-to-What? An Environmental Merit Order Curve for Biobased Chemicals and Plastics

Abstract
The chemical industry aims to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions (GHGs) by adopting biomass as a renewable carbon feedstock. However, biomass is a limited resource. Thus, biomass should preferentially be used in processes that most reduce GHG emissions. However, a lack of harmonization in current life cycle assessment (LCA) literature makes the identification of efficient processes difficult. In this study, 46 fermentation processes from literature are harmonized and analyzed on the basis of their GHG reduction compared with fossil benchmarks. The GHG reduction per amount of sugar used is defined as Sugar-to-X efficiency and used as a performance metric in the following. The analyzed processes span a wide range of Sugar-to-X efficiencies from -3.3 to 6.7 kg of CO2 equiv per kg of sugar input. Diverting sugar from bioethanol production for fuels to the fermentation and bioconversion processes with the highest Sugar-to-X efficiency could reduce the chemical industry's GHG emissions by an additional 130 MT of CO2 equiv without requiring any more biobased feedstocks.
Author(s)
Winter, Benedikt Alexander
Meys, Raoul
Sternberg, André  
Fraunhofer-Institut für Solare Energiesysteme ISE  
Bardow, André
Journal
ACS sustainable chemistry & engineering  
Project(s)
Demonstration of solvent and resin production from lignocellulosic biomass via the platform chemical levulinic acid  
Funder
European Commission  
DOI
10.1021/acssuschemeng.2c03275
Additional full text version
Landing Page
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Solare Energiesysteme ISE  
Keyword(s)
  • biobased chemicals

  • biobased feedstock

  • bioconversion

  • chemical processes

  • climate change

  • life cycle assessment

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