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  • Press release - 09/10/2023

    Microalgae: Environmentally friendly and healthy alternative to fish

    Researchers at the University of Hohenheim are working on an alternative to fish consisting of microalgae. Advantage: Microalgae have high quality ingredients and also contribute to carbon storage.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/microalgae-environmentally-friendly-and-healthy-alternative-fish
  • Diatoms as a biorefinery - 05/05/2023 Black and white microscopic image of the diatom cells, in which the lipid bodies are marked in green and a schematic representation of the conversion reaction has been zoomed into one of the cells. At the top of the image, the molecular model of the synthetic catalyst.

    Microalgae: sustainable chemical production in a mini factory

    Renewable raw materials that can be used as alternatives to fossil resources already exist. However, to turn them into everyday products, plant oils and other renewable raw materials not only have to be extracted, but often have to undergo complex chemical processing. Researchers at the University of Konstanz have now converted microalgae cells into tiny refineries to produce and upgrade raw materials, creating a supply of sustainable chemicals.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/microalgae-sustainable-chemical-production-mini-factory
  • Synergistic effects with microalgae and purple bacteria - 03/02/2023 Chlorella microalgae

    Working towards a hydrogen economy with a wastewater biorefinery: the SmartBioH2-BW project

    A biorefinery that uses industrial wastewater and residual material streams is being built in Rheinfelden (Baden). It will have two interlinking bioreactors and will synthesize biohydrogen as well as organic basic materials such as carotenoids and proteins. SmartBioH2-BW is a pilot project run by the Urban and Industrial Biorefineries initiative and funded by the Baden-Württemberg Ministry of the Environment, Climate Protection and Energy Sector.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/working-towards-hydrogen-economy-wastewater-biorefinery-smartbioh2-bw-project
  • Project FuTuReS - 12/12/2022 Orange-coloured fucoxanthin, as a powder and dissolved in a glass vial.

    Microalgae - high-quality products for domestic agriculture?

    Algae are aquatic organisms that flourish in a huge variety of species. But that's not all: they are also small green mini-factories that can produce all kinds of valuable materials. All they need is water, light, CO2 and a few nutrients that can be recycled from biogas or sewage treatment plants. Researchers have now determined the optimal framework conditions and practicability of process methods for agricultural algae cultivation.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/microalgae-high-quality-products-domestic-agriculture
  • Festo’s high-tech bioreactor - 10/11/2022 A user with a tablet reading data in front of the bioreactor

    Valuable materials of all kinds - produced automatically in living cells

    In future, algae could be used to produce practically everything that still requires petroleum, including plastics, fuels, medicines and food. Algae are also climate savers par excellence, because they bind ten times more CO2 than terrestrial plants. Festo, a company based in Esslingen, Germany, has developed a high-tech bioreactor that can be used to automatically cultivate the small green biofactories - and that do so a hundred times more…

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/valuable-materials-all-kinds-produced-automatically-living-cells
  • Press release - 29/09/2022

    Algae as microscopic biorefineries

    Fossil raw materials are limited and not available and extractable everywhere in the world – as we are becoming acutely aware of right now by the example of fossil fuels and rising energy prices. Renewable raw material sources will therefore play an increasingly important role in the future: as energy sources, but ideally also as suppliers of building blocks for more environmentally compatible chemicals and materials.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/algen-als-mikroskopische-bioraffinerien
  • Press release - 02/03/2022

    Pilot project RoKKa uses wastewater to produce fertiliser and raw materials

    The Ministry for the Environment, Climate Protection and the Energy Sector is funding the new research project RoKKa which is used to prove the viability of recovering raw materials from wastewater. This adds a crucial function to the scope of a conventional sewage treatment plant. Together with the operators of the sewage treatment plants in Erbach and Neu-Ulm, the project partners demonstrate the positive contribution towards climate protection…

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/die-klaeranlage-der-zukunft-heisst-bioraffinerie
  • Reduction of greenhouse gases in wine production - 31/08/2021 Zu sehen sind mehrere große Fermentationstanks aus Edelstahl nebeneinander. Im Vordergrund sind zwei Menschen abgebildet.

    The REDWine project and climate change

    In the EU project REDWine, the CO2 produced during wine fermentation is captured and used to produce algae biomass. Novis GmbH from Tübingen supplies the complete system for CO2 utilisation. The aim of the project is to reduce the share of global warming caused by wine production in a way that is economical for producers.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/redwine-project-and-climate-change
  • Showcase Bioeconomy - 22/06/2021

    Advanced biofuel breakthrough: HyFlexFuel converted sewage sludge and other biomasses into kerosene by hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL)

    The EU funded research project HyFlexFuel recently succeeded to produce biocrudes via hydrothermal liquefaction (HTL) from a variety of biomasses, including sewage sludge, food waste, manure, wheat straw, corn stover, pine sawdust, miscanthus and microalgae in a pilot-scale continuous HTL plant at Aarhus University (Denmark).

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/advanced-biofuel-breakthrough-hyflexfuel-converted-sewage-sludge-and-other-biomasses-kerosene-hydrothermal-liquefaction-htl
  • Press release - 02/02/2021

    Cyanobacteria could revolutionize the plastic industry

    Microbiologists at the University of Tübingen modify bacteria to produce climate-neutral and rapidly degradable bioplastics.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/pm/Cyanobacteria-could-revolutionize-the-plastic-industry
  • Dossier - 09/11/2020 Verpackung_Silphie_Faser.jpg

    Packaging of the future

    What will the packaging of the future look like, and what will be required of it? Can packaging be biobased, recyclable, sustainable and economic? In Baden-Württemberg, there are various approaches to developing packaging with the above properties from various sources including agricultural residual and side streams as well as municipal waste.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/packaging-future
  • Dossier - 28/04/2020 Silphie_Edmund_Hochmuth_Pixabay.jpg

    Sustainable bioenergy

    Biomass from forestry and agriculture along with residues from industry and households can contribute to our energy and raw material shift. Sustainable, regenerative biomass-based energy can become part of the energy mix of the future within the framework of a bioeconomy.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/Sustainable-bioenergy
  • Article - 19/09/2019 Die Biologin im Labor mit Algen in Glasflaschen

    Magnetised algae as microrobots for medical and environmental purposes

    Algae, for most of us, is something that lives in water courses that we occasionally find unpleasant. However, that is to do them a wrong. These extremely versatile and frugal organisms might in future prove to be extremely important. Scientists at the University of Stuttgart are investigating how algae can be used as microrobots in biomedicine and environmental remediation.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/magnetisierte-algen-als-mikroroboter-fuer-medizin-und-umwelt
  • Article - 27/03/2019 Figure showing a hand with different varieties of large algae.

    Residues from biogas plants as feed for algae

    Algae are frugal organisms. They require only light, water, minerals and carbon dioxide to be able to produce biomass. These properties will now be exploited economically in a two-year research project. Dr. Stefan Sebök from the University of Hamburg plans to study the holistic utilisation of degradation products of a biogas plant in Wallerstädten by linking them to land-based algae cultivation.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/news/residues-from-biogas-plants-as-feed-for-algae
  • Overview

    Perspectives on the bioeconomy

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/bw/definition/perspectives-on-the-bioeconomy
  • Overview

    Processes and technologies in the bioeconomy

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/bw/definition/processes-and-technologies-in-the-bioeconomy
  • Dossier - 09/12/2013 20751_de.jpg

    Industrial biotechnology biological resources for industrial processes

    Industrial or white biotechnology uses microorganisms and enzymes to produce goods for industry, including chemicals, plastics, food, agricultural and pharmaceutical products and energy carriers. Renewable raw materials and increasingly also waste from agriculture and forestry are used for the manufacture of industrial goods.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/industrial-biotechnology-biological-resources-for-industrial-processes
  • Dossier - 08/10/2012 13527_de.jpg

    Marine biotechnology unknown sources of hope from the depths of the sea

    Biotechnological methods are used to investigate marine life and the results obtained from these investigations advance research in the fields of medicine and energy and into substances used as food supplements and cosmetics. The area of marine biotechnology is fairly diverse. Although it is not on the coast even the southern German state of Baden-Württemberg is involved in marine biotechnology.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/marine-biotechnology-unknown-sources-of-hope-from-the-depths-of-the-sea
  • Dossier - 01/10/2012 virtual molecular structure

    Systems biology understanding complex biological systems

    Systems biology studies complex interactions within biological systems on the genome proteome and organelle level. Many techniques from the fields of systems theory and associated fields can be used to gain an understanding of the behaviour and biological mechanisms of cellular systems.

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/systems-biology-understanding-complex-biological-systems
  • Dossier - 23/07/2012 Biopro-Grafik-Biooekonomie-Stadt-R-Einzelne-Grafiken-gross5.png

    Extremophilic bacteria

    Extremophilic bacteria love it hot, sour or salty, toxic substances like heavy metals also do them good and even give them energy. As molecular and systems biology techniques get better and better, industry is also becoming increasingly interested in these exotic organisms. What potential does knowing the biochemistry of extremophilic bacteria have for the pharmaceutical, cosmetics and sanitary articles industries?

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/extremophilic-bacteria
  • Dossier - 16/04/2012 Lichens: symbiotic organisms composed of fungi and algae. Living as a symbiont in a lichen enables the fungus to derive essential nutrients. The algae possess chlorophyll and can produce glucose, which the fungus needs. In return, the fungus provides the algae with a place to live, protects them against dehydration and enables the algae to live in environments where they would not normally be able to subsist.

    Symbioses - effective communities of unequal partners

    https://biopro-v9-test-bio.xanium.io/en/articles/dossiers/symbioses-effective-communities-of-unequal-partners
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