New Zealand Logger

High-value products from refining bark

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SCION SAYS THERE IS HUGE POTENTIAL for converting bark into value-added products including water-repelling polymers, green chemicals and bio-fuel.

Around 2.3 million tonnes of bark is produced annually by the New Zealand forestry industry. Pine bark is a rich source of polyphenol­s, polysaccha­rides, terpene and resin acids that each have unique functional and structural properties.

Developing methods that can extract and refine these high value chemicals and other products using green chemistry and sustainabl­e technologi­es in a ‘Bark Bio-refinery’ is at the heart of a five-year Scion research programme supported by the Ministry of Business, Innovation & Employment’s Endeavour Fund to promote science projects.

The bark bio-refinery promises to deliver significan­t quantities of water-repelling (hydrophobi­c) polymers. Hydrophobi­c polymers are used in items from paper coffee cups and rainwear to touch screen coatings. The market is dominated by petrochemi­calbased polymers but bio-based hydrophobi­c polymers are part of a rapidly growing market niche.

The Scion research team plans to a combinatio­n of extraction techniques to yield high value products, as well as a hot water treatment to extract tannins. The remaining solid waste with its high residual lignin content could be processed into bark briquettes, for example, and used as a renewable biofuel.

Available bark volumes are expected to increase due to a ban on methyl bromide use from 2020 onwards, which could mean only de-barked logs are able to be exported.

Scion says bark bio-refinery technology provides a new economic opportunit­y to convert a waste stream into a range of high value materials that will earn an estimated value of $400-600 million per annum, contribute $1.8 billion to New Zealand’s GDP and add several thousand new jobs by 2050.

NZL

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