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PLAN UNVEILED FOR SUGARCANE INDUSTRY TO DRIVE BIOECONOMY BOOM
PLAN UNVEILED FOR SUGARCANE INDUSTRY
TO DRIVE BIOECONOMY BOOM
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The sugarcane industry could become the backbone of an Australian bioeconomy superhighway under the Sugar Plus vision and roadmap.
The Sugar Plus vision and roadmap was developed in partnership by sugar industry organisations with support from the Cooperative Research Centre for Developing Northern Australia (CRCNA) and the Queensland Department of Agriculture and Fisheries.
CRCNA Chief Executive Officer Anne Stünzner said Sugar Plus outlines an important role for the industry in
Fuelling the Future of Food, Energy and Fabrication.
“The sugarcane industry has identified an exciting and transformational future of sustainably producing sugar and bioproducts at the heart of regional communities.” Anne Stünzner, CRCNA
Industry as usual, delivered by current stakeholders Better business as usual
2022
Adding value across the industry
Bioeconomy, with opportunity for both current and new stakeholders
Plans Pilots 1st Investments Scale-up
Alt-proteins, bio by-products, cogeneration etc Mainstream Sugar Plus
Bioplastics Biofuels
Nature services, e.g. soil carbon capture, revegetation, biodiversity, etc
“The roadmap outlines opportunities for a substantially larger industry. A growing bioeconomy industry will enable Australia to become increasingly selfsufficient, improving economic resilience and national security.”
Ms Stünzner said analysis undertaken in developing the roadmap indicated enormous opportunity.
“Australian demand for heavy fuels and plastics is substantial. Even modest adoption of biofuels and bioplastic equates to a substantial amount of sugar equivalent alternative products. Australia’s current domestic market alone would create massive demand for alternative protein feedstock, aviation fuel and bioplastics,” Ms Stünzner said.
Sugar Research Australia Chief Executive Officer Roslyn Baker congratulated industry organisations for the strong partnership and collaboration in developing the roadmap and their commitment to innovation and growth.
• Food is where it all starts. Raw sugar will continue to play an important role in feeding the world. Sugar is also an important feedstock for the new generation of animal free foods. • Energy that builds on current cogenerated power and ethanol, provides the next generation of sustainable mobility and power. The sugarcane plant is one of the best natural sources for transforming into renewable energy and biofuels for heavy transport and aviation.
“The roadmap includes initiatives to support better business-as-usual in the near term, add value and create new revenue streams in the medium term, and become a bioeconomy powerhouse in the longer term." Roslyn Baker, SRA
• Fabrication for the future is about making products that enable a more sustainable way of life, including replacements for the many plastic items produced and used every day.
“The roadmap outlines the actions needed across a range of levels, from individual farms to local communities through regional coordination or support of a mill and national leadership,” Ms Baker said.
Minister for Agricultural Industry Development and Fisheries and Minister for Rural Communities Mark Furner said Sugar Plus highlighted the sugar industry’s important role in supporting long-term economic development in Queensland.
“Queensland produces almost 95 per cent of Australia’s sugar cane which is worth almost $4 billion dollars a year to the nation’s economy and supports 23,000 direct and indirect jobs from Mossman in far north Queensland, through to northern New South Wales,” Mr Furner said.
“That is why the Queensland Government supported the development of this industry-led initiative, backing the industry to come together to make the Sugar Plus vision a reality.
“We look forward to the ongoing implementation of key priorities that align with those of the Queensland Government and will work with industry to responsibly grow the bioeconomy in regional Queensland.”
PLANTS
FOOD
ENERGY
Plant-based foods Cellular fermentation Other sources
Biofuels for heavy transport Energy from waste biomass
Bioplastics and biochemicals Biomaterials for packaging
FABRICATION
Circular economy Regenerative agriculture (i.e. on-farm carbon capture, innovative practices)