Kuwait Times

In climate push, German chem firm swaps oil for sugar

- LEVERKUSEN, Germany:

At one of Europe’s largest chemical complexes, German group Covestro is trialing the manufactur­e of a key product using sugar as a base material instead of oil, as the industry seeks to reduce its carbon footprint. The pilot project involves producing “aniline”, a chemical used in making foams — used widely in mattresses and armchairs, as well as building insulation.

While large-scale, commercial production is probably years away, the experiment marks a small step in the chemical industry’s battle to slash carbon emissions as Earth faces a dire climate emergency.

Of the 100 million barrels of oil produced worldwide every day, “a quarter goes directly into the chemical industry,” said Walter Leitner, from Aachen University, which has been involved in the aniline project for a decade. “The chemical industry needs to be completely rebuilt.”

Plastics manufactur­er Covestro — a former division of chemical giant Bayer — started trials at its complex in the western city of Leverkusen at the end of 2023, after laboratory tests.

In a 100-square-metre (1,080-square-foot) room, aniline, a transparen­t fluid, is extracted from a 600-metre network of intertwine­d pipes. Using a process developed by University of Stuttgart researcher­s, fermented sugar is treated with chemicals to make the product.

Aniline is used as the base ingredient for chemical MDI, which is an essential material in manufactur­ing foams. Traditiona­lly, aniline has been obtained from crude oil derivative­s like naphtha and benzene, but producing it emits large quantities of carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas.

Around six million tons of aniline are produced globally a year, around one million tons of it by Covestro. So far, the pilot project in Leverkusen produces just a tiny part of this, extracting just half a ton of aniline a day.

Some experts are skeptical about such an approach. The use of plant matter in manufactur­ing may cut out fossil fuels but whether it can lead to carbon neutrality “is often questionab­le”, Jens Guenther, from Germany’s Federal Environmen­t Agency, told AFP.

This is particular­ly the case when it comes to the use of “so-called cultivated biomass like maize, sugar cane and sugar beet,” he said. Janine Korduan, from environmen­tal NGO BUND, pointed out that industrial agricultur­e generates “CO2 and methane emissions through land conversion and the production of fertilizer­s and pesticides”, and also leads to “major losses of biodiversi­ty and high water consumptio­n”. Neverthele­ss, Guenther said the use of plant matter in production processes would likely produce significan­tly lower greenhouse gas emissions than using fossil fuels, although opting for waste materials rather than crops produced in large-scale farming would be preferable.

Other German companies are experiment­ing in the area. Chemical giant BASF is seeking to use organic waste, agricultur­al products or vegetable oils to produce basic chemicals like aniline. There are many barriers to taking such projects further, however.

These range from the availabili­ty of the necessary organic matter, which is in great demand as the green transition gathers pace, to higher costs when compared to producing such chemicals with oil. — AFP

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