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First open center for the biobased economy in Europe

On December 12, Europe, Flanders and The Netherlands have joined forces within the framework of an Interreg IV project and allocated €21 million to Bio Base Europe. Bio Base Europe is the largest Interreg project ever granted to the Dutch-Flemish border region. Bio Base Europe will build research and training facilities for biobased activities, in order to speed up the development of a sustainable biobased economy in Europe. Bio Base Europe is the result of a partnership between Ghent Bio-Energy Valley and Biopark Terneuzen and their respective stakeholders.

Bio Base Europe is an important building block for the development of the biobased economy in Europe and is expected to boost the current drive towards sustainable production processes and to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases such as CO2. Biopark Terneuzen in The Netherlands and Ghent Bio-Energy Valley in Belgium have each individually already built a strong reputation as biobased enablers in the Dutch-Flemish border regions. The new Bio Base Europe partnership project is now set to transform the region into the main bio-economy gateway in Europe.

The Bio Base Europe initiative is the first of its kind in Europe. Bio Base Europe will develop a unique platform for the advancement of sustainable biobased processes that aid the development of bio-energy and bioproducts from renewable biomass resources and cut reliance on non-replaceable fossil fuels. This transition from the current fossil-based economy towards a biobased economy is seen as one of the primary routes towards industrial sustainability. Biobased production is already transforming a broad range of industries, notably in the chemical, energy and agro-industrial sectors around the world.

Bio Base Europe consists of two parts: a Pilot Plant and a Training Center. The Bio Base Europe Pilot Plant will focus mainly on second generation technologies to convert agricultural waste products and non-food crops such as wheat straw, corn cobs, wood chips, Jatropha and algae oils into biofuels, bioplastics and other bioproducts. Whereas the potential of these technologies has already been demonstrated in laboratory trials, the difficulty lies in taking these processes to the production scale. Currently, many new processes are held up or even abandoned because of these difficulties. The Bio Base Europe Pilot Plant is set to eliminate this obstacle, by providing pilot facilities that permit scaling up new bioprocesses to an industrial level. The Bio Base Europe Pilot Plant is a flexible and diversified pilot plant, capable of performing the entire value chain in a single plant: from the green resources up to the final product. It will operate as an open innovation center, available for commercial companies and research institutions that are engaged in biobased activities throughout the world.

The second core part of the Bio Base Europe initiative will include a state-of-the-art Training Center to address the issue of an industry-wide shortage of skilled process operators and technical maintenance specialists, especially for the biobased economy. Bio Base Europe Training Center will be located close to Terneuzen, The Netherlands. It will feature training facilities for biobased activities, and is operating according to an open education model. It will provide standard, as well as company specific, training and education focused on biobased processes. Bio Base Europe Training Center will also encourage networking activities, technological innovation and entrepreneurship and will develop a public information and communication program. The Bio Base Europe Training Center will be operational in 2010.



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