THE SUGAR CANE BIOFACTORY-BUILDING BLOCKS FOR THE FUTURE
By P.H. TWINE
THE SUGARCANE plant, with its enormous genetic capacity to accumulate carbon
and manufacture and store sucrose, also has the potential to accumulate carbon
and metabolically create a wide range of new molecules for industrial and other
commercial uses. The extent to which this change can be developed and realised
commercially is a function of the technical competence of the industry?s R&D
capacity, the reality of the commercial drivers which support this global agenda,
and the determination of the industry to achieve such goals. The outcomes of
existing R&D work already strongly support the technical challenges of this
opportunity in sugarcane. The current challenge remains the commercialisation
of the technology in a global market in which the current business structures and
systems for the manufacture and distribution of existing (competitive) products
makes the development of new product lines a higher risk than might otherwise
be the case. This is despite all the claims that global markets are expecting and
(in some cases) legislating the creation of more sustainable production systems.
The options and issues for the development of a sugarcane biofactory system are
discussed.