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Our Changing World

Future forest industry

27 min • 14 september 2022

In a future that is free of fossil fuels, where will we source all the products that we get from the petroleum industry? Scientists at the forest research institute Scion think that trees might provide the solutions we need.

Fossil fuels aren't just used for transport and energy - they're also used to make everyday products. As we move away from fossil fuels, where else can we find these materials? For the team at the forest research institute Scion, the answers can be found in our forests.

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"We need to strike the word waste from our vocabulary," says Dr Stefan Hill, the portfolio leader of high-value biorefineries at Scion. His team are responsible for figuring out what useful compounds can be extracted out of waste biomass - for example, the bark that is stripped from pine trees before they get shipped overseas as timber.

Bark is essentially the skin of the tree, key for its protection and defence. So the team are interested to see if they can extract antimicrobial and water repellent compounds for use in health and clothing applications.

Some of the work is at early stages, but one idea that has progressed to proof-of-concept stage is the extraction and use of vegetable tannins.

Chemist Dr Hilary Corkran works on the tannin extraction from pine bark in the lab. Working with Callaghan Innovation to upscale their extraction process, and in partnership with the leather and shoe research association (LASRA), they've been able to show that these tannins can be used to create a soft, good-quality leather product. In fact, with McKinlays footwear in Dunedin, they've produced the only pair of New Zealand-sourced tannin leather boots. Currently all tannins used in creating leather in Aotearoa are imported and the current most common method uses the heavy metal chromium. The team hope that their work will provide a locally sourced vegetable tannin product to change this.

Of course, biorefineries will only work if it is technically and economically feasible to extract the materials. That is where the work of Dr Marie-Joo Le Guen comes in. She collaborates with industry partners to essentially find a 'home' for the materials and compounds, and work on the upscaling of the extractions to make them worthwhile. …

Go to this episode on rnz.co.nz for more details

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