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Chance for ‘entente cordiale agricole’!

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NFU Chief Renewable Energy Adviser Jonathan Scurlock was invited recently by the British Embassy in Paris to attend a UKFrance bilateral discussion meeting on the bioeconomy, which included the key role of farming.

He writes: “On Wednesday (March 7), in the luxurious surroundin­gs of the Duke of Wellington’s former residence in Paris, discussion­s between France and Britain took place about how we can align our respective approaches to the bio-based economy or ‘bioeconomy’.

I had to agree wholeheart­edly with the French when they spoke of “lever les freins” – taking off the regulatory brakes – in order to boost agricultur­al biogas and biofuels.

Their presenters appeared to have more real-life and agricultur­al case studies than our government and research body representa­tives, who included staff from BEIS, BBSRC and InnovateUK.

I took part in one of the panel discussion­s alongside Defra and French farmers’ representa­tives, and highlighte­d the NFU’s frustratio­n at the slow progress in UK biofuels policy, as well as the regulatory burden that holds back promising non-food crops like industrial hemp.

It emerged that both British and French farmers share ambitious goals for the future growth of AD biomethane plants to help decarbonis­e heat supply through our respective gas networks. There was agreement, too, that both countries should put in place indicative targets for public procuremen­t and standards for the private sector.

This could be done by mandating the use of biodegrade­able bio-based fuels, lubricants, working fluids in environmen­tally sensitive areas.

Our common aim is to support diverse bio-based supply chains based upon tens of millions of tonnes of primary and secondary resources, including both domestic and imported feedstocks.

The French published their national bioeconomy strategy in 2017, while the UK Bioeconomy Strategy is expected imminently.

Let’s hope the British Government takes off those brakes and releases that potential!” More informatio­n about the bioeconomy:

Primary agricultur­al biomass and energy crops, as well as wood products, are all part of the bioeconomy, together with co-products, residues and wastes from both food and nonfood production.

The NFU believes that primary ‘virgin’ bio-based feedstocks are essential in some applicatio­ns where consumer acceptabil­ity or product quality is critically important (e.g. for safety reasons in food packaging), so a strong bioeconomy cannot be built upon secondary resources like wastes alone.

Farmers have access to an abundance of flexible renewable resources, which can provide the raw materials for a wide range of bio-based products, including food, feed, fibre and many different kinds of fuels and chemicals – such as intermedia­te ‘platform’ compounds like methane, ethanol, ethylene and isobutene.

There are further opportunit­ies in engineered or chemically-modified long-lived structural materials like acetylated wood, ‘glulam’, hemp-lime biocomposi­tes, panel products and insulation materials, which need to break into the traditiona­lly conservati­ve constructi­on sector.

 ?? Jonathan Scurlock, inset, sat on the panel discussing the future of the bio-based economy ??
Jonathan Scurlock, inset, sat on the panel discussing the future of the bio-based economy

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