Bio-based Chemicals and Enzymes: India’s Bioeconomy Push

Source : The Hindu

  • Bio-based chemicals are produced from renewable biomass (sugarcane, corn, agri-residue) using fermentation or enzymatic processes, offering lower carbon footprint vs petrochemicals.
  • India has prioritised the sector under Department of Biotechnologys BioE3 Policy (2024)Biotechnology for Economy, Environment, Employment.
  • India still imports key intermediates; e.g., ~$480 million acetic acid imports in 2023, showing petrochemical dependence and opportunity for bio-alternatives.
  • Global push for net-zero and circular bioeconomy is driving demand for green chemicals, sustainable fuels, and industrial enzymes.

Relevance

  • GS-III (Science & Technology)
    • Biotechnology, industrial bioprocessing
    • Innovation-led growth sectors
  • GS-III (Environment)
    • Circular economy
    • Low-carbon industrial transition
    • Waste-to-wealth
What are Bio-based Chemicals?
  • Industrial chemicals derived from biomass instead of fossil fuels, including:
    • Organic acids (lactic, acetic)
    • Bio-alcohols (ethanol, butanol)
    • Bioplastics & solvents
  • Used in plastics, cosmetics, pharma, textiles, packaging.
What are Enzymes?
  • Biological catalysts enabling reactions at lower temperature & pressure, reducing energy use by 1030% in some industrial processes (IEA estimates for bioprocessing).
  • Key sectors:
    • Detergents
    • Food processing
    • Pharmaceuticals
    • Biofuels
Policy Framework
  • BioE3 Policy (2024):
    • Focus on bio-manufacturing and green growth.
    • Links with Atmanirbhar Bharat and Net Zero 2070 goals.
  • Related initiatives:
    • National Biofuel Policy
    • PLI schemes in chemicals & specialty materials
    • SATAT for bio-CNG
1) Economic Potential
  • Global bio-based chemicals market:
    • Estimated $110–120 billion, projected to grow at ~10–12% CAGR (industry estimates).
  • Enzyme market:
    • Global size $12–15 billion, dominated by Novozymes (Denmark) and DSM (Netherlands).
  • India’s enzyme market:
    • Consolidated; top players hold >75% share.
2) Resource Advantage
  • India produces 500+ million tonnes of agri-residue annually, much underutilised or burned.
  • Strong sugar industry:
    • India among top 2 global sugar producers, enabling ethanol and biochemicals.
3) Industrial Base
  • Major Indian players:
    • Praj Industries – biofuels & biochemicals.
    • Godavari Biorefineries – bio-based chemicals & ethanol.
    • Advanced Enzyme Technologies, Rossari Biotech – industrial enzymes.
4) Environmental Gains
  • Bio-based chemicals can reduce lifecycle emissions by 30–80% vs petrochemicals (EU bioeconomy studies).
  • Support circular economy and waste-to-wealth models.
Opportunities
  • Reduces import dependence on petrochemicals.
  • Creates new markets for farmers via biomass value chains.
  • Aligns with global ESG investment flows toward green manufacturing.
Risks / Constraints
  • Cost disadvantage vs fossil-based chemicals when crude prices are low.
  • Limited bioprocessing infrastructure:
    • Few bio-foundries, pilot plants, scale-up facilities.
  • Technology gaps:
    • Advanced enzymes and fermentation tech often imported.
  • Market adoption:
    • Downstream industries reluctant without price parity.
  • Scale shared bio-manufacturing infrastructure (bio-foundries, pilot plants).
  • Offer green procurement incentives for bio-based products.
  • Support R&D-industry linkages via DBT and BIRAC.
  • Develop standards & certification for bio-based products.
  • Integrate with carbon markets and green finance.
Prelims Pointers
  • BioE3 Policy – DBT initiative.
  • Enzymes reduce energy need in industry.
  • Bio-based chemicals derive from biomass, not fossil fuels.
  • India major agri-residue producer.


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