PROJECT DESCRIPTION
BACKGROUND
EU agriculture and horticulture industries generate around 1.3 million tonnes of plastic waste per year, 60% from films and 30% from twines, nets, clips, pots and trays. Within the EU, 2 600 farms grow hops over an area covering at least 26 000 hectares. Hops growing still uses a system based on wire or polypropylene twine attached to trellises. Roughly 45km of polypropylene twine per hectare is used each season. While providing an excellent mechanical performance, the polypropylene makes proper composting, recycling or landfilling of post-harvest biomass (15 tonnes/ha/year) impossible.
As a result, most waste is still disposed of by uncontrolled burning, with the related adverse environmental impacts. In addition, as only the hop cones are used, the remaining two thirds of biomass (bines and leaves) is discarded as non-compostable waste, typically sent to landfill or incineration plants. Landfilling such mixed agro-wastes which are contaminated with fertilisers and pesticides is also unsustainable, expensive and potentially harmful
.OBJECTIVES
The primary objective of LIFE BioTHOP is to demonstrate the value and potential of hop post-harvest biomass, thus promoting a new circular economy model for improved agricultural waste management. It will combine bioplastic twining materials with new ways to use hop crop waste in packaging and horticulture products.
More specifically, the project aims to:
BioTHOP objectives are in line with the Roadmap to a resource efficient Europe [COM(2011)571], the European strategy for plastics in the circular economy [COM(2018)28] and the thematic strategy on the prevention and recycling of waste [COM(2013)211]. The project will help implement the Waste Framework Directive (2008/98/CE), the Directive on the landfill of waste [COM(2014)397] and the Directive on eco-design [2009/125/EC; COM(2013)123].
RESULTS
Expected results: