'Bagasse' (sometimes spelled ''bagass'') is the
biomass remaining after
sugarcane stalks are crushed to extract their juice.
A sugar factory produces nearly 30% of bagasse out of its total crushing. Many research efforts have attempted to use bagasse as a renewable
feedstock for
power generation and for the production of
bio-based materials.
Bagasse is often used as a primary fuel source for sugar mills; when burned in quantity, it produces sufficient heat energy to supply all the needs of a typical sugar mill, with energy to spare. To this end, a secondary use for this waste product is in
cogeneration, the use of a fuel source to provide both heat energy, used in the mill, and electricity, which is typically on-sold to the consumer
electricity grid.
The resulting CO
2 emissions are equal to the amount of CO
2 that the sugarcane plant used up from the atmosphere during its growing phase, which makes the process of cogeneration appear to be greenhouse gas-neutral. However when a full audit of energy used in production is done, 75% of the energy required to grow and move the sugar cane (including bagasse) is from liquid fuel (petroleum or hydrocarbon based), leading to a 25% net gain from photosynthesis.
Ethanol produced from the sugar in sugarcane is a popular fuel in
Brazil. The cellulose rich bagasse is now being tested for production of commercial quantities of
cellulosic ethanol.
Bagasse is also used as a Tree-Free alternative for making paper. This process requires no bleaching, is more biodegradable, easier to recycle, and overall has less impact on the environment. As in sugar production, the sludge left over after removing the cellulose fibers, is used to power the paper-mills. Examples of commercial sites advertising such uses are http://www.fullcircleplanet.com/ and http://www.stalkmarket.net/ and http://www.tree-free.com and http://www.excellentpackaging.com/pages/1/index.htm
In particular Bagasse is used to make insulated disposable food containers, replacing materials such as
styrofoam, which are increasingly regarded as environmentally unacceptable (see
Bans). http://www.apacbiopaperplastic.com is a commercial site discussing this use.
'Agave bagasse' is a similar material which consists of the tissue of the
blue agave after extraction of the sap.
See also
★
Biofuel
Further reading
★
''The Potential of Bagasse-Based Cogeneration in the US'', Kevin Ho, Columbia University, 2006.
Bagasseware
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