Bio-based Production of Ethylene from Ethanol - BioBiz

Introduction

Ethylene is the world’s most produced organic compound, acting as a key building block for plastics (like polyethylene), antifreeze, synthetic rubber, surfactants, and solvents. Traditionally derived from naphtha or ethane steam cracking, ethylene production is highly energy-intensive and carbon-emitting.

The bio-based production of ethylene from ethanol presents a sustainable and commercially viable alternative. Ethanol, produced via fermentation of sugars or lignocellulosic biomass, can be catalytically dehydrated to yield renewable ethylene—a drop-in replacement for fossil-derived ethylene compatible with existing infrastructure.

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What Products Are Produced?

  • Bio-ethylene → Used in:
  • Polyethylene (PE) – Films, containers, pipes
  • Ethylene oxide (EO) – Antifreeze, solvents, surfactants
  • Vinyl acetate monomer (VAM) – Paints, adhesives
  • Styrene, ethylbenzene, and other intermediates

Pathways and Production Methods

1. Fermentation of Sugars to Ethanol

  • Feedstocks: Sugarcane, corn, cassava, lignocellulosic biomass
  • Microorganisms: Saccharomyces cerevisiae, Zymomonas mobilis, engineered yeasts

2. Catalytic Dehydration of Ethanol to Ethylene

  • C₂H₅OH → C₂H₄ + H₂O (Endothermic reaction)
  • Operates at 300–500°C with catalysts like:
  • Alumina (Al₂O₃)
  • Silica-alumina
  • Zeolites (ZSM-5)

3. Integrated Biorefineries

  • Combine ethanol fermentation and dehydration units
  • Allow use of agricultural residues for second-generation (2G) ethanol

Catalysts and Key Tools Used

  • Solid Acid Catalysts:
  • Alumina – Widely used, thermally stable
  • HZSM-5 zeolite – High selectivity and reusability
  • Modified silica-alumina – Tuned for temperature control

Process Features:

  • Vapor-phase dehydration
  • Heat integration with ethanol distillation
  • High ethylene selectivity (~99%) possible

Bioprocessing Tools:

  • 2G ethanol fermentation with lignocellulose pretreatment
  • CO₂ emission control with biomass-based energy integration

Case Study: Braskem – Green Polyethylene from Sugarcane Ethanol

Highlights

  • World’s first commercial-scale bio-ethylene plant (200,000 TPA)
  • Ethanol from Brazilian sugarcane dehydrated to ethylene
  • Ethylene used to produce I’m Green™ polyethylene
  • Products exported to global FMCG, packaging, and pharma brands

Timeline

  • 2010 – Commercial plant started in Triunfo, Brazil
  • 2013 – Expanded partnerships with Unilever, Coca-Cola
  • 2021 – Announced new capacity for green ethylene and PE
  • 2023 – Supplied bio-PE for 100+ global consumer brands

Global and Indian Startups Working in This Area

Global

  • Braskem (Brazil) – World’s leading bio-ethylene producer
  • LanzaTech (USA) – Exploring gas fermentation to ethanol, then ethylene
  • Dow Inc. – Investing in bio-ethylene integration for PE
  • Axens (France) – Technology licensing for ethanol-to-ethylene

India

  • Godavari Biorefineries – Investigating 2G ethanol routes for ethylene
  • Praj Industries – Commercial 2G ethanol producers, evaluating dehydration technology
  • IOCL & BPCL – Pilot initiatives for green ethylene co-processing
  • ICT Mumbai – Process development for ethanol dehydration using Indian biomass

Market and Demand

The global ethylene market is valued at over USD 180 billion (2023), expected to reach USD 250+ billion by 2030, driven by plastic packaging, automotive, construction, and chemicals. Bio-ethylene has a ~12% CAGR, with increasing interest in low-carbon polyethylene.

Major End-Use Segments:

  • Plastic packaging – PE bags, films, containers
  • Consumer goods – Bottles, caps, FMCG packaging
  • Industrial chemicals – EO, MEG (used in PET, antifreeze)
  • Construction and pipes – HDPE, LLDPE products

Key Growth Drivers

  • Push for fossil-free plastics by major FMCG brands
  • Carbon neutrality goals driving green ethylene adoption
  • Abundance of ethanol in India and Brazil
  • Compatibility with existing plastic manufacturing lines
  • Scope for decentralized production near bioethanol plants

Challenges to Address

  • High capital cost for dehydration units
  • Energy demand of vapor-phase dehydration
  • Feedstock variability in 2G ethanol
  • Need for policy support in India for green ethylene procurement
  • Price competition with fossil ethylene in volatile oil markets

Progress Indicators

  • 2010 – First commercial bio-ethylene plant in Brazil
  • 2017 – India’s ethanol-blending policy boosts interest
  • 2020 – Trials for dehydration catalysts in Indian R&D labs
  • 2023 – India’s national bioeconomy roadmap includes green olefins
  • 2024 – Braskem partners with new brands for bio-PE rollout

Globally, the ethanol-to-ethylene process is at TRL 9 and fully commercialized. In India, TRL 6–7, with growing pilot and pre-commercial efforts around 2G ethanol sources.

Conclusion

Bio-based production of ethylene from ethanol offers a renewable, scalable, and infrastructure-ready solution to decarbonize one of the largest petrochemical markets in the world. With technological maturity, commercial success, and a clear alignment with sustainability targets, it stands as a cornerstone for the bioeconomy transition.

India, with its massive ethanol production capacity and plastic demand, has a prime opportunity to invest in green ethylene infrastructure, supporting circular economy goals while reducing petrochemical imports.


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Expert Consulting Assistance for Indian Bioenergy & Biomaterials

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Call Muthu – 9952910083

Email – ask@biobiz.in