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Socio-Economic and Environmental Impacts of Biomass Valorisation: A Strategic Drive for Sustainable Bioeconomy

Journal

SUSTAINABILITY
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/su13084200

Keywords

waste to value; bio-residues; bioconversion; renewable; bioenergy; biodiesel; bioactive compounds; polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHAs)

Funding

  1. Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) under the Sistema Nacional de Investigadores (SNI) program [CVU: 735340]

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In recent years, there has been a growing focus on finding environmentally friendly and economically beneficial solutions for biomass and waste management, replacing traditional methods. The development of bioaugmentation methods and microbial fuel cells, among other new technologies, is expected to revolutionize the fields of biofuel, bioenergy, pharmaceuticals, and biochemicals in the future.
In the late twentieth century, the only cost-effective opportunity for waste removal cost at least several thousand dollars, but nowadays, a lot of improvement has occurred. The biomass and waste generation problems attracted concerned authorities to identify and provide environmentally friendly sustainable solutions that possess environmental and economic benefits. The present study emphasises the valorisation of biomass and waste produced by domestic and industrial sectors. Therefore, substantial research is ongoing to replace the traditional treatment methods that potentially acquire less detrimental effects. Synthetic biology can be a unique platform that invites all the relevant characters for designing and assembling an efficient program that could be useful to handle the increasing threat for human beings. In the future, these engineered methods will not only revolutionise our lives but practically lead us to get cheaper biofuels, producing bioenergy, pharmaceutics, and various biochemicals. The bioaugmentation approach concomitant with microbial fuel cells (MFC) is an example that is used to produce electricity from municipal waste, which is directly associated with the loading of waste. Beyond the traditional opportunities, herein, we have spotlighted the new advances in pertinent technology closely related to production and reduction approaches. Various integrated modern techniques and aspects related to the industrial sector are also discussed with suitable examples, including green energy and other industrially relevant products. However, many problems persist in present-day technology that requires essential efforts to handle thoroughly because significant valorisation of biomass and waste involves integrated methods for timely detection, classification, and separation. We reviewed and proposed the anticipated dispensation methods to overcome the growing stream of biomass and waste at a distinct and organisational scale.

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