Aim
This course focuses on converting sugarcane industry residues—such as bagasse, cane trash, molasses, press mud, and vinasse—into biofuels and bioenergy products. Participants will learn feedstock characterization, pre-processing and conversion pathways (biochemical and thermochemical), process selection logic, sustainability assessment, and techno-economic thinking. The program emphasizes safe, compliant, and industrially relevant approaches (conceptual and design-oriented rather than step-by-step production protocols). The course culminates in a capstone project where learners develop a Sugarcane Waste-to-Biofuel Plant Blueprint for a chosen region, mill, or integrated biorefinery scenario.
Program Objectives
- Feedstock Understanding: Learn sugarcane waste streams, composition (cellulose/hemicellulose/lignin), and variability.
- Pathway Selection: Compare biochemical (2G ethanol, biogas/CBG) and thermochemical (pyrolysis/gasification) routes.
- Pre-processing & Logistics: Understand collection, densification, storage, and contamination control for residues.
- Conversion Concepts: Learn key conversion blocks (pretreatment, hydrolysis, fermentation; anaerobic digestion; thermal conversion) at a high level.
- Process Integration: Explore integrated biorefinery concepts and co-products for higher overall value.
- Sustainability & LCA Thinking: Evaluate carbon impacts, circularity benefits, and water/energy tradeoffs.
- Techno-Economic Reasoning: Build basic cost/benefit logic and scale-up constraints for real deployments.
- Hands-on Outcome: Produce a feasibility-style blueprint with pathway choice, mass/energy logic, and implementation plan.
Program Structure
Module 1: Sugarcane Waste Streams and the Bioenergy Opportunity
- Overview of sugarcane value chain and waste generation points.
- Residues: bagasse, cane trash, molasses, press mud, vinasse—typical properties and challenges.
- Biofuels landscape: ethanol, biogas/CBG, bio-oil, syngas, power/steam co-generation.
- Impact framing: waste reduction, rural energy, emissions mitigation, and circular economy.
Module 2: Feedstock Characterization and Quality Control
- Lignocellulosic basics: cellulose, hemicellulose, lignin—why they matter for conversion.
- Moisture, ash, and impurities: how they influence process efficiency and equipment.
- Sampling concepts and variability management across seasons and regions.
- Storage risks: biodegradation, fire safety awareness, and handling best practices (conceptual).
Module 3: Pre-processing, Logistics, and Supply Chain Design
- Residue collection and transport models: centralized vs decentralized processing.
- Densification concepts: baling/pelletizing logic for cane trash and bagasse handling.
- Contamination control: soil, rocks, moisture—why it matters.
- Supply chain KPIs: delivered cost, reliability, and seasonal availability planning.
Module 4: Biochemical Conversion Pathway I — 2G Ethanol (Conceptual)
- High-level process blocks: pretreatment → hydrolysis → fermentation → recovery.
- Why pretreatment is needed for bagasse/cane trash (structure and accessibility concepts).
- Fermentation options overview and productivity constraints (no operational protocols).
- Co-products and integration: lignin-rich residues and heat/steam optimization.
Module 5: Biochemical Conversion Pathway II — Biogas / Compressed Biogas (CBG)
- Anaerobic digestion concepts for press mud/vinasse blends and mixed substrates.
- Biogas quality and upgrading overview: methane enrichment concepts and end-use options.
- Digestate handling: nutrient recovery logic and circular agriculture pathways.
- Operational risks awareness: odor, corrosion, safety and compliance considerations.
Module 6: Thermochemical Pathways — Pyrolysis and Gasification (High-Level)
- When thermal routes make sense: moisture/ash constraints and product goals.
- Pyrolysis overview: bio-oil, char, and gas streams—use-cases and stabilization challenges.
- Gasification overview: syngas logic and downstream energy applications (conceptual).
- Biochar and carbon benefits: soil amendment potential and verification mindset.
Module 7: Integrated Sugarcane Biorefinery and Co-Product Strategy
- Integration with sugar mills: steam/power, heat recovery, and residue routing options.
- Co-products: electricity, biochar, CO₂ utilization concepts, and nutrient recovery.
- Process selection matrix: feedstock → technology fit → markets → infrastructure.
- Reliability planning: downtime, redundancy, and seasonal operation strategies.
Module 8: Sustainability Assessment, LCA Thinking, and Compliance
- Emissions accounting basics: baselines, avoided emissions, and system boundaries.
- Water-energy tradeoffs: vinasse handling, process water, and energy efficiency levers.
- Safety and environmental compliance awareness: handling, storage, and reporting expectations (overview).
- Responsible claims: evidence-based reporting and uncertainty awareness.
Module 9: Techno-Economic Analysis (TEA) and Project Feasibility
- Cost drivers: feedstock logistics, capex blocks, opex, utilities, and maintenance.
- Revenue logic: fuel sales, co-products, tipping fees (where applicable), and carbon value concepts.
- Scale-up constraints: supply chain stability, quality control, and operator skill requirements.
- Decision readiness: risks, assumptions, sensitivity thinking, and stakeholder alignment.
Final Project
- Create a Sugarcane Waste-to-Biofuel Blueprint for a selected geography or sugar mill cluster.
- Include: feedstock map and quantities, chosen conversion pathway, process flow (high level), mass/energy logic, sustainability justification, risk/compliance notes, and a rollout plan.
- Example projects: 2G ethanol concept for bagasse + trash, CBG facility using press mud + vinasse, hybrid biorefinery integrating cogeneration + biochar, or a decentralized residue-to-energy hub model.
Participant Eligibility
- Students and professionals in Biotechnology, Chemical Engineering, Environmental Science/Engineering, Energy, or related fields.
- Professionals from sugar mills, agro-processing, rural energy, and sustainability programs.
- Entrepreneurs exploring waste-to-energy and circular economy opportunities.
- Basic understanding of biology/chemistry/energy concepts is helpful but not required.
Program Outcomes
- Feedstock-to-Fuel Clarity: Understand sugarcane residue types and the best-fit biofuel pathways.
- Process Selection Skill: Ability to compare conversion routes and choose based on constraints and goals.
- Systems Thinking: Understand integration options, co-products, and practical scale-up limitations.
- Sustainability Reasoning: Apply LCA-style thinking to justify environmental benefits responsibly.
- Portfolio Deliverable: A feasibility-style blueprint suitable for industry or grant discussions.
Program Deliverables
- Access to e-LMS: Course notes, case studies, and pathway comparison guides.
- Planning Toolkit: Feedstock assessment checklist, pathway selection matrix, TEA-lite worksheet, and risk/compliance checklist.
- Case Exercises: Residue mapping, pathway scoring, co-product planning, and sustainability boundary definition.
- Project Guidance: Mentor feedback on blueprint logic and feasibility assumptions.
- Final Assessment: Certification after assignments + capstone submission.
- e-Certification and e-Marksheet: Digital credentials provided upon successful completion.
Future Career Prospects
- Bioenergy / Biorefinery Analyst
- Waste-to-Energy Project Associate
- Bioprocess & Sustainability Associate (Agro-Residues Focus)
- Rural Energy & Circular Economy Program Associate
- Carbon & Environmental Impact Analyst (Biofuels)
Job Opportunities
- Sugar Mills & Distilleries: Bioenergy integration, residue valorization planning, and sustainability operations.
- Biofuel & Waste-to-Energy Companies: Project development, feedstock logistics, and process evaluation roles.
- Energy & Infrastructure Firms: Rural energy deployment and integrated biorefinery projects.
- Government/NGO Programs: Clean energy, circular economy, and rural livelihood sustainability initiatives.
- Research Institutes: Applied R&D on biomass conversion pathways and impact assessment.








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