On the way to demonstrating the benefits of bio-based materials for the construction sector

ISOBIO aims to develop new bio-based insulation panels and renders, and to scale them for mainstream adoption by the building and construction industry. The focus is now on the challenging demonstration phase.

ISOBIO innovation partners are bonded by a unique goal: to design a bio-based insulation material with the right chemical and mechanical properties to tackle water absorption, fire resistance and moisture buffering while ensuring high thermal conductivity. These essential properties provide material resistance as well as indoor wellbeing and confort.

In February 2017, partners convened on the premises of TWI in Cambridge for their mid-term project meeting. It was an opportunity for them to assess the research and preliminary prototyping, and to outline the regulatory and market challenges ahead. Following this meeting, the final composition of the bio-materials is now just around the corner.

As part of their research, the Universities of Bath and Rennes have examined the characterisation of bio-materials and the development of composite materials (including the insulating core and the composition of the external layer). These research results form the basis for the technical developments by industrial partners Cavac, BCB and Claytec. The innovation lies in the feeding of knowledge from the labs into the industrialisation phrase.

After testing and prototyping, ISOBIO is poised to reveal a bio-based product design offering all the right properties for a greener building and construction industry: high insulation, low embodied energy and carbon, and hydrothermal efficiency.

 

17 March 2017

Drivers of the European Bioeconomy in Transition

The bioeconomy comprises sectors that use renewable biological resources to produce food, materials and energy. It is at the centre of several global and EU challenges in the near future such as the creation of growth and jobs, climate change, food security and resource depletion.

Several policy and action plans have been endorsed, among which the Bioeconomy Action Plan (2012) takes a particular integrative approach, comprising all those sectors of the economy that use renewable biological resources from land and sea – such as crops, forests, sh, animals and micro-organisms – to produce food, materials and energy.

The Drivers of European Bioeconomy in Transition report includes a detailed contemporary ‘business as usual’ projection to 2030 with accompanying alternate narratives representing two hypothetical policy pathways. Employing a useful decomposition technique, the reader is given insightful access to the relative role of economic and policy drivers in shaping market trends. Furthermore, by comparing policy narratives with the reference scenario, the report assesses both the resilience of EU’s bioeconomy in fulfilling a diverse portfolio of policy goals and identifies potential policy conflicts and trade-offs.

Read the full report HERE.

Materials for Clean Air

Sustainable, affordable materials play an important role in improving air quality in cities. In the framework of COP21 goals, the EC launched a contest to develop an innovative and well-designed material solution that will reduce the concentration of particulate matter in the air.

The desing of innovative materials have an impact not only on the bioeconomy and energy sector, but in the health sector and tackling climate change issues and ecosystems likewise.

The contest will be open untill January 2018. For further info, visit the Horizon Prize website.