Heeres partner in HORIZON EUROPE-RIA consortium NewWave
The NewWave project will build a circular economy by adapting four manufacturing lines to substitute traditional fossil-based materials with bio-based resources that are sustainable, nontoxic and fully recyclable. The four manufacturing lines are polyols and polyurethane, hydroxymethyl furfural and derivatives, engineered wood panels and modified wood. The individual manufacturing lines, as well as the integrated value chain, will be assessed in detail on technical, economic, social and environmental performance to ensure the production is truly sustainable.
Prof. dr. Erik Heeres of ENTEG, professor in Green Chemical Reaction Engineering, is partner in this consortium that will receive approximately €5 million via Horizon Europe-RIA. Heeres receives 400k€ to contribute to the development of efficient catalytic routes for hydroxymethyl furfural and phenols from selected biobased feeds.
Partners: B.T.G. Biomass technology group BV (Coordinator; the Netherlands), Aep Polymers Srl (Italy); Foresa Technologies S.L. (Spain); Avecom (Belgium); Rijksuniversiteit Groningen (The Netherlands); InnoRenew CoE (Slovenia); Blue Synergy Sl (Spain); Transfurans Chemicals Bvba (Belgium); Foreco Dalfsen BV (the Netherlands); Eta – Energia, Trasporti, Agricoltura Srl (Italy); Ava Biochem Bsl Ag (Switzerland)
For more information about the project: https://www.newwave-horizon.eu
Last modified: | 20 September 2022 2.37 p.m. |
More news
-
30 January 2025
Highlighted papers December 2024 - January 2025
Read our highlighted papers from December/January: new insights into electronics from 2D materials, and into the protein clumps that cause Huntington's disease.
-
28 January 2025
Studying the universe to understand the world
By understanding the cosmos, we can better fathom the fundamentals of our world. That is the idea behind the research theme Fundamentals of the Universe, in which three institutes of the University of Groningen form a unique collaboration.
-
27 January 2025
Working on better AI (with a smaller budget than the US)
The US is going to invest a staggering amount of $500 billion in AI. At the University of Groningen, researchers are working on future-proof computing: more energy-efficient hardware and responsible AI that can collaborate with humans.