Abstract

The transition to a bioeconomy is one of the ambitions of the European Union for 2030. Biobased industries play an essential role in this transition. However, there has been an on-going discussion about the actual benefit of using biomass to produce biobased products, specifically the use of agricultural materials (e.g., corn and sugarcane). This paper presents the environmental impact assessment of 30% and 100% biobased polyethylene terephthalate production using European biomass supply chains (e.g., sugar beet, wheat, and miscanthus). An integral assessment between the life cycle assessment methodology and the global sensitivity assessment is presented as an early-stage support tool to propose and select supply chains that improve the environmental performance of biobased polyethylene terephthalate production. From the results, miscanthus is the best option for the production of biobased polyethylene terephthalate: promoting European local supply chains, reducing greenhouse gas emissions (process and land-use change), and generating lower impacts in midpoint categories related to resource depletion, ecosystem quality, and human health. This tool can help improving the environmental performance of processes that could boost the shift to a bioeconomy.

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