2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.indcrop.2014.04.043
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Technical and economic feasibility of a guayule commodity chain in Mediterranean Europe

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Cited by 32 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…From our simulations (Sfeir et al, 2014), we found that the biomass could be sold to the biorefiner at D 300 ton −1 . The benefit for the farmer was then of D 300-D 147 = D 153 ton −1 of dry biomass.…”
Section: • Outputsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…From our simulations (Sfeir et al, 2014), we found that the biomass could be sold to the biorefiner at D 300 ton −1 . The benefit for the farmer was then of D 300-D 147 = D 153 ton −1 of dry biomass.…”
Section: • Outputsmentioning
confidence: 85%
“…Probably at the top of the range established for the price of sesquiterpenes (100-1000 € kg −1 ) [69]. This could significantly increase the net profit estimated at 211€ t −1 [68]. They could be introduced in the market as active substances for manufacturing pesticides (fungicides, insecticides and miticides) for agriculture, food and livestock industries, mature and relevant markets worldwide, with one billion pounds of pesticides annually applied to U.S. farms or among 350,000 and 400,000 ton of PPPs sale in the EU per year.…”
Section: Economic Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An economic feasibility analysis of a potential commercial facility in Europe [68], to produce latex, crude rubber, resin and bagasse as final products, showed that the breakeven price for guayule could change from 8.16 € kg −1 of dry rubber (far above the market price and not currently feasible) to 2.46 € kg −1 (approximately US$ 2.76 kg −1 ) when additional sources of revenue are included (rubber at 2.15 € kg −1 , resin at 2.10 € and bagasse at 0.10 €). This is a profitability calculated from a production of 810 kg ha −1 year −1 of natural rubber (90 ton total dry biomass in 10 year cultivation cycle, containing 9% of natural rubber) [68], while the expected production of the crop in the USA is 1400 kg ha −1 year −1 [66]. Valorized guayulin production could help off-set processing costs.…”
Section: Economic Considerationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Currently, guayule is considered as an alternative source, having the potential to become commercial crop, to produce natural rubber in Europe. Sfeir et al [6] evaluated technical and economic feasibility of a guayule commodity chain in Mediterranean Europe, indicating that this crop might be a sector commercially profitable only in the framework of a biorefinery approach. This requires the valorization of the whole plant biomass and that of the production of bioenergy and non-rubber co-products, to be converted into products and/or raw materials with high added value for different sectors [7].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%