446
29 Zero-Waste Biorefineries for Circular Economy
Household
Composting
Compost
Biorefining
Food crop
Compost
Biogas
Municipal household waste
Household waste bin
Liquid biofuels
Fruits and vegetables
CO2
collection
Figure 29.3
The schematic representation of zero-waste management concept.
the globe. Besides, regulatory factors as human resources, intellectual property,
regulatory condition, and social acceptance are stimulating factors. The principal
element which can dissolve the complications of the economy is the sustainable
resource demand which can bypass various challenges. There is a connection
between the risk and opportunities factor of bioenergy with that of bioeconomy.
The full utilization of waste resource from thermal and power application to
composting and application as biomanure to achieve zero-waste concept and
circular economy is shown in Figure 29.3. For the generation of energy from the
biomass, the ratio of the number of benefits with that of the negative impact of
bioenergy production can be encountered by biodiversity, food security, and water
quality areas [41]. The dependency of these impacts for the actualization is largely
on the design and bioenergy system implementation. How much reduction in GHG
emission is going to happen is dependent on another parameter being technology
and resource management of the feedstock and land used [42]. Bioenergy can be
considered as a test study for bioeconomy, especially in achieving sustainability
goals. However, the impact of bioenergy systems is recruiting complications by
growing international trades and increasing competition for biomass resources [42].
Policies established by the EU played an important role in the birth of bio-based
fuel. In 2008 as per the climate and energy policy package, by 2020 in the overall EU