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X-WR-CALNAME:Bio Based Press
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.biobasedpress.eu/nl/
X-WR-CALDESC:Evenementen voor Bio Based Press
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TZID:Europe/Paris
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DTSTART:20180325T010000
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DTSTART:20181028T010000
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20180529T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20180530T170000
DTSTAMP:20201230T213222
CREATED:20171204T160219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20171204T160219Z
UID:11247-1527580800-1527699600@www.biobasedpress.eu
SUMMARY:Siñal Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Observations and Challenges\nAt some point\, all of us have made\, make or will make the following observations : \n\n\nThe world population is expanding and getting older.\nIts food and energy consumption is increasing extremely rapidly.\nFossil fuel resources such as gas and petrol are running out.\nThe productive agricultural area per inhabitant is declining on a global scale.\nGlobal warming is continuing\, destroying the environment and having a negative impact on human activities.\nThe development of biomass applications constitutes one of the most important means chosen by the European Union and France of controlling the consumption of non-renewable resources and of fighting climate change.\n\n\nProgress in this area allows for: \n\nThe exploitation of France’s exceptional agricultural and forestry potential.\nThe creation of opportunities by offering new outlets for these essential fields\, whilst encouraging sustainable activities and creating jobs in these areas.\nThe development of alternative solutions for numerous domains in which biomass is being used increasingly frequently: such as fuel\, for thermal and electrical energy\, in different types of materials\, chemistry\, fertilisers\, soil improvers\, etc.\n\nThus\, it demands consistency and synergy between the different types of use\, as well as a greater and balanced mobilisation of bioresources\, whether they be incidental energy sources (waste products\, by-products\, co-products)\, or dedicated energy sources (crops and plantations)\, so long as they contribute to the sustainable management of agricultural land and forests\, and to guaranteeing the supply to pre-existing industries (agri-food\, wood-fibre\, etc.). \n\nUse of regional assets\nChampagne-Ardennes\, in association with the neighbouring region\, Picardy\, is famous for being a very fertile agricultural area on a European and global scale\, and for its arable crops in particular (cereals\, oleaginous\, beetroot). Agricultural production adapts and diversifies to meet the challenges of sustainable development. Faced with the programmed disappearance of fossil-based resources\, the application of agricultural resources has become a major challenge for our future. These new non-food outlets also correspond to the urgent need to limit the production of greenhouse gases. \nIndustries thus develop around new markets and also to replace other products.\n  \nThe stakeholders \nIn order to meet these new challenges\, major players in the early days of the food processing industry used cooperative and industrial means. However\, after several years\, they diversified towards non-food replacement applications and new markets such as biofuels\, white biotechnology and green chemistry\, as well as new materials (packaging\, insulation and construction\, etc.). \n\nAn internationally-oriented competitive cluster \nThe goal of the Pôle de Compétitivité “Industries et Agro-Ressources” (IAR) [“Industries and Agricultural Resources” Competitive Cluster] is to be the European point of reference for the industrial use of agricultural resources by 2015. It aims to unite stakeholders in research\, teaching and industry within Champagne-Ardennes and Picardy around a common theme : the non-food applications of plant resources. \nFour areas for strategic action have thus been identified and grouped together under the biorefinery concept: \n\n\nBioenergy\n\n\nBiomaterials\n\n\nBiomolecules\n\n\nFoodstuffs\n\n\nThe aim and the strategy of this ‘Industries and Agricultural Resources’ cluster are to combine the competencies and technologies for the extraction\, transformation and formulation of biomass components\, in order to complete all the stages – from the laboratory to industrial development – of an innovative project that forms part of the overall perspective of sustainable development. \n\n\nAims : To have international scope\nThe new challenges for Sustainable Development are global. The solutions that agricultural resources can provide through their non-food applications go beyond the boundaries of a single country or even a single continent. \n\nTo be a cross-cutting and multi-sector trade fair \nOffering the entire range of non-food applications of agricultural resources under one roof. The aim and added value of SIÑAL EXHIBITION\, International Non-Food Trade Fair\, is to present under one roof the entire range of new non-food applications for agricultural resources\, covering all sectors. \nLed by Cités en Champagne\, in partnership with the IAR cluster\, SIÑAL EXHIBITION brings together the industrial\, institutional and major regional economic stakeholders. It aims to serve as a showcase for new non-food outlets for agricultural producers. \n\nTo become the benchmark “RENEWABLE” trade fair \n«From field to field» \nAfter sustainability and recycling\, we have now entered the renewable age and begun to progress towards zero-carbon-emission solutions. \nThere is a market for the new applications of agricultural resources\, servicing the new industrial requirements\, which guarantee future economic development\, and this goes beyond the “biorefinery” transformation process. These “green gold” agricultural resources are crops whose non-food applications help reduce the greenhouse effect\, conserving the environment for future generations. \nEach component of the plant is extracted or separated and\, if necessary\, functionalised\, using different mechanical\, chemical or biological processes. The value of the resulting non-food and food fractions\, intermediary agri-industrial products and intermediaries in organic synthesis\, is generally in inverse proportion to their volume. These fractions are then used directly or formulated to suit the end-users’ requirements. Any waste products are then used in the form of biofuels. \n\nBiomass\, the new alternative ?\nBiomass is derived from recently living organisms. It includes biodegradable residues from agriculture – from both plant and animal sources – from the forestry sector and related industries as well as biodegradable industrial and household waste. \n\nWhere does biomass come from ? \nThe main sources of biomass are: \n\nAgriculture\,\nForests\,\nMarine and other aquatic environments\,\nGreen waste\,\nIndustries and human activities that use living and recently dead biological material.\n\n\n  \nWhat can biomass be used for? \nBiomass has traditionally been used as a source of fuel and for industrial production. With the current rise in petrol prices\, the use of biomass as a raw material in chemistry and as a fuel\, common in the 19th and at the beginning of the 20th century\, is regaining popularity. \nTraditional or innovative biomaterial:\nWood and its derivatives\, hemp and other plants that can be used to made textiles\, are increasingly being utilised as insulating materials and even added to composite concrete. Starch from cereals or potatoes is employed to make biodegradable plastics and many other polymers. \nRaw materials in chemistry:\nSurfactants\, solvents\, bitumen solvents\, inks\, paints\, resins\, binding agents\, lubricants\, antifreeze products\, active ingredients and essential oils used in pharmaceutics and cosmetics. \nBiofuels:\nRapeseed\, sunflower\, soyabean and palm oils are the basic raw materials used to make biodiesel. The so-called ‘second generation’ biofuels are derived from the cellulose found in a wide variety of non-food crops such as straw and wood. \nBiofuel to produce heat and electricity:\nWood in the form of logs\, chips\, bark\, salvage timber\, granules or briquettes. Straw and crop residues.\nOther sources such as grape marc\, fruit kernels\, waste from paper factories (black liquor\, sludge)\, waste from local authorities etc. are used to produce biogas\, which is created by the anaerobic fermentation of waste. \n\nThe Biorefinery\nA new industrial principle is emerging\, based on the use of biomass feedstock – the biofefinery. In order to be economically viable and to fit into the perspective of sustainable development\, this concept must fulfil two conditions: \n\nProduction costs (including raw materials\, processes\, and positive and negative externalities) must be sufficiently attractive and competitive.\nThe products and procedures must be eco-friendly – on a local and global level – without generating additional waste. The biorefinery concept allows for the entire plant to be used in the transformation processes and the production of plant-based resources\, adopting an integrated approach and linking the stakeholders of the market.\n\nUnder this approach\, each component of the plant is extracted or separated and\, if necessary\, functionalised\, using different mechanical\, chemical or biological processes. The value of the resulting non-food and food fractions\, intermediary agri-industrial products and intermediaries in organic synthesis intermediaries is generally in inverse proportion to their volume. These fractions are then used directly or formulated to suit the end-users’ requirements. Any waste products are then used in the form of biofuels. \nThe alternative to petrol has arrived\, it is an inexhaustible and renewable resource: biomass\, in other words the entire plant. Like petrol\, plants are made up of countless molecules\, which can be refined: each component of the plant can be extracted and functionalised to produce green fuel\, building and packaging materials\, household products\, beauty creams\, etc. \nThese true or ‘green’ agricultural resources thus become the foundations of a new concept\, the bioeconomy : bioenergy\, agricultural materials\, biomolecules\, foodstuffs. \nThe aim is to group together within a radius of a few square kilometres – in an area where agricultural resources are produced – a biofuel factory\, a biotech operator\, an ingredients manufacturer\, a pilot straw fractionation unit\, and a co-generation factory that transforms the co-products of these units into heat or electricity. The by-products from one centre thus become the raw materials for the others. \n\nEco-responsible event \nSIÑAL EXHIBITION aims to promote the values of sustainable development by establishing environmental objectives within its organisation\, thus focusing on being an eco-responsible event. \nThe organisers are committed to this process: SIÑAL EXHIBITION exhibitors and visitors are invited to join them.
URL:https://www.biobasedpress.eu/nl/event/sinal-exhibition-4/
LOCATION:Capitole en Champagne\, 68\, Avenue du Président Roosevelt\, 51000 Chalons-en-Champagne\, Frankrijk
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