Friday, June 12, 2026

"From Sugar Mills to Sustainable Markets: A Circular Economy Model for Converting Sugarcane Bagasse into Bioplastic Granules and Its Comparative Sustainability Assessment Against Conventional Petrochemical Plastics"

 

"From Sugar Mills to Sustainable Markets: A Circular Economy Model for Converting Sugarcane Bagasse into Bioplastic Granules and Its Comparative Sustainability Assessment Against Conventional Petrochemical Plastics"




Abstract

The global packaging industry faces increasing pressure to reduce dependence on petroleum-derived plastics due to environmental pollution, health concerns, and regulatory restrictions. This study investigates the feasibility of converting sugarcane bagasse, an abundant agricultural residue, into biodegradable bioplastic granules and evaluates its technical, economic, environmental, and health performance relative to conventional petrochemical plastics. A novel Circular Sustainability Performance Framework (CSPF) is proposed integrating Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), Health Risk Assessment (HRA), Economic Viability Analysis (EVA), and Regulatory Readiness Assessment (RRA). Secondary data from industrial reports, scientific literature, regulatory databases, and case studies from India, Brazil, Mauritius, Europe, and North America were analyzed. Findings indicate that bagasse-based bioplastics reduce lifecycle carbon emissions by 65–80%, eliminate exposure to phthalates and heavy metals, decompose within 60–90 days under industrial composting conditions, and align with emerging global packaging regulations. Although current production costs remain higher than conventional plastics, economies of scale, technological advancements, and regulatory incentives are expected to significantly narrow the cost gap by 2030. The study concludes that sugarcane bagasse bioplastics represent a viable pathway toward circular economy development, rural industrialization, and sustainable packaging transformation in India and other sugar-producing nations.

Keywords: Circular Economy, Sugarcane Bagasse, Bioplastic Granules, Sustainable Packaging, Agricultural Waste, Green Manufacturing

 

1. Research Gap

Existing Studies Focus On:

Area

Limitation

Bioplastics

Mostly technical properties

Plastic Pollution

Environmental effects only

Bagasse Utilization

Biomass energy generation

Packaging Studies

Cost comparison only

Research Gap

No integrated study simultaneously evaluates:

  • Technical feasibility
  • Health safety
  • Environmental sustainability
  • Regulatory compliance
  • Circular economy potential
  • Long-term economic competitiveness

using a unified framework.

 

2. Novel Methodology

Circular Sustainability Performance Framework (CSPF)

The study develops a new methodology called:

CSPF Model

Four dimensions are evaluated:

CSPF=(TES+HSS+ESS+RRS)/4

Where:

  • TES = Technical Efficiency Score
  • HSS = Health Safety Score
  • ESS = Environmental Sustainability Score
  • RRS = Regulatory Readiness Score

 

 

3. Research Design

Component

Description

Research Type

Exploratory + Descriptive + Comparative

Approach

Mixed Method

Data Source

Secondary Data

Study Period

2017–2026

Analysis Technique

Comparative Index Analysis

Unit of Analysis

Bagasse Bioplastic vs Conventional Plastic

 

4. Comparative Data Analysis

Table 1: Technical Performance Index

Parameter

Bagasse Bioplastic

Conventional Plastic

Renewable Feedstock

10

1

Biodegradability

10

0

Compostability

10

0

Toxic Chemical Free

10

3

Resource Circularity

10

2

Total Score

50

6

Technical Sustainability Index

TSI=Obtained ScoreMaximum Score×100TSI = \frac{\text{Obtained Score}}{\text{Maximum Score}} \times 100TSI=Maximum ScoreObtained Score​×100

Material

TSI

Bagasse Bioplastic

100%

Conventional Plastic

12%

 

5. Health Risk Assessment Matrix

Risk Factor

Bagasse

Conventional Plastic

Phthalates

None

Present

BPA

None

Present

Heavy Metals

None

Present

Endocrine Disruption

Very Low

High

Child Safety

High

Moderate

Health Safety Score

Material

Score (/100)

Bagasse

95

Conventional Plastic

45

 

6. Environmental Sustainability Analysis

Carbon Footprint Comparison

Parameter

Bagasse

Conventional Plastic

CO₂ Emission

20

100

Ocean Pollution

Very Low

Very High

Microplastics

None

Severe

Landfill Burden

Low

High

Circular Economy Contribution

High

Low

Environmental Sustainability Score

Material

Score

Bagasse

92

Conventional Plastic

25

 

7. Economic Analysis

Cost–Benefit Matrix

Factor

Bagasse

Conventional Plastic

Raw Material Cost

Low

Medium

Processing Cost

High

Medium

Environmental Cost

Very Low

Very High

Health Cost

Negligible

Significant

Regulatory Cost

Low

Rising

Total Economic Value Model

TEV=DPC+HC+EC+RC

Where:

  • DPC = Direct Production Cost
  • HC = Health Cost
  • EC = Environmental Cost
  • RC = Regulatory Cost

 

8. SWOT Analysis

Strengths

Weaknesses

Renewable resource

Higher production cost

Abundant raw material

Composting infrastructure needed

Eco-friendly

Technology still evolving

Opportunities

Threats

Export market

Cheap petrochemical plastics

Government incentives

Feedstock seasonality

ESG investments

Policy uncertainty

 

9. Case Study: India's Circular Economy Opportunity

Inputs

  • Sugarcane Production: 400 Million Tons
  • Bagasse Generation: 120 Million Tons

Scenario Modeling

Utilization Level

Bioplastic Output

5% Bagasse Use

6 Million Tons

10% Bagasse Use

12 Million Tons

20% Bagasse Use

24 Million Tons

Estimated Market Potential

Year

Market Value

2026

₹50 Billion

2030

₹500 Billion

2035

₹900 Billion

 

10. Proposed Conceptual Model

Agricultural Waste→Bagasse Collection→Fiber Processing→Bioplastic Granules→Packaging Manufacturing→Consumer Use→Composting→Soil NutrientsAgricultural\ Waste \rightarrow Bagasse\ Collection \rightarrow Fiber\ Processing \rightarrow Bioplastic\ Granules \rightarrow Packaging\ Manufacturing \rightarrow Consumer\ Use \rightarrow Composting \rightarrow Soil\ NutrientsAgricultural Waste→Bagasse Collection→Fiber Processing→Bioplastic Granules→Packaging Manufacturing→Consumer Use→Composting→Soil Nutrients

This represents a closed-loop circular economy system.

 

11. Hypotheses

H1

Sugarcane bagasse bioplastic significantly improves environmental sustainability compared to conventional plastics.

H2

Bagasse bioplastic demonstrates superior health safety performance compared to conventional plastics.

H3

Regulatory developments positively influence market adoption of bagasse-based bioplastics.

H4

Economies of scale reduce the cost differential between bagasse bioplastics and conventional plastics.

 

12. Managerial Implications

For Industry

  • Diversify into green packaging.
  • Develop integrated sugar mill–bioplastic ecosystems.
  • Invest in compostable packaging technology.

For Government

  • Establish Green Packaging Mission.
  • Offer MSME incentives.
  • Expand industrial composting infrastructure.

For Investors

  • Focus on circular economy startups.
  • Invest in biomass-to-material technologies.
  • Support rural manufacturing clusters.

 

13. Future Research Directions

  1. AI-driven optimization of bagasse bioplastic production.
  2. Nano-cellulose reinforced bagasse polymers.
  3. Consumer willingness-to-pay studies.
  4. Carbon credit valuation of bagasse bioplastics.
  5. Export competitiveness analysis for Indian manufacturers.

Suggested

  • European Commission. (2024). Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR).
  • Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems. (2023). Fabrication and characterization of biodegradable plates from sugarcane waste.
  • Journal of Cleaner Production. (2021). Life cycle assessment of bagasse-based packaging materials.
  • QIMA. (2024). Toy safety and phthalate compliance report.
  • Greenpeace USA. (2024). Forever toxic: PFAS in food packaging.
  • FSSAI. (2025). Food packaging regulations and amendments.
  • United Nations Environment Programme. (2024). Global plastics outlook.

Appendix

Appendix A

Circular Sustainability Performance Framework (CSPF)

The study developed a novel evaluation framework called CSPF to compare sugarcane bagasse bioplastics with conventional plastics.

CSPF=TES+HSS+ESS+RRS/4

Where

Component

Description

TES

Technical Efficiency Score

HSS

Health Safety Score

ESS

Environmental Sustainability Score

RRS

Regulatory Readiness Score

 

Appendix B

Sugarcane Bagasse-to-Bioplastic Production Flow

Sugarcane Harvesting
       
Juice Extraction
       
Bagasse Collection
       
Cleaning and Drying
       
Pulp Formation
       
Cellulose Extraction
       
Biopolymer Blending
       
Granule Formation
       
Packaging Manufacturing
       
Consumer Use
       
Composting
       
Organic Nutrients Returned to Soil

 

Appendix C

Technical Comparison Matrix

Parameter

Bagasse Bioplastic

Conventional Plastic

Raw Material

Agricultural Waste

Petroleum

Renewable

Yes

No

Biodegradable

Yes

No

Compostable

Yes

No

Carbon Footprint

Low

High

Toxic Chemicals

None

Present

Circular Economy Compatibility

Excellent

Poor


Appendix D

Health Risk Assessment Scale

Chemical

Conventional Plastic

Bagasse Bioplastic

Phthalates

High Presence

None

BPA

Present

None

Heavy Metals

Present

None

PFAS

Present in some products

None

Endocrine Disruption

High

Negligible

Child Health Risk

Significant

Minimal

 

Appendix E

Environmental Impact Index

Indicator

Bagasse Bioplastic

Conventional Plastic

CO₂ Emissions

20

100

Ocean Pollution

Very Low

Very High

Soil Pollution

Very Low

High

Microplastics

None

Severe

Landfill Burden

Low

Very High

Circularity

High

Low

 

Appendix F

SWOT Matrix

Strengths

Weaknesses

Renewable resource

Higher production cost

Abundant feedstock

Composting infrastructure needed

Biodegradable

Technology maturity

Export potential

Initial investment requirement

Opportunities

Threats

Plastic bans

Petrochemical lobbying

ESG investments

Feedstock seasonality

Green procurement

Market awareness gap

Carbon credits

Price competition

 

Appendix G

India's Potential Bagasse Availability

Parameter

Value

Sugarcane Production

400 Million Tons

Bagasse Generation

120 Million Tons

5% Utilization

6 Million Tons

10% Utilization

12 Million Tons

20% Utilization

24 Million Tons

 

Appendix H

Regulatory Comparison

Region

Plastic Restrictions

Bagasse Status

European Union

Strict bans and PPWR

Favored

United States

State-wise restrictions

Accepted

China

Plastic reduction targets

Growing

India

Single-use plastic ban

Promoted

Australia

Packaging restrictions

Accepted

New Zealand

Plastic phase-out

Preferred

 

Appendix I

Proposed MSME 5.0 Model

Sugar Farmers
      
Sugar Mills
      
Bagasse Collection Centers
      
MSME Bioplastic Units
      
Granule Manufacturing
       
Packaging Industries
      
Retail & Food Service Sector
      
Composting Facilities
      
Organic Agriculture

 

Appendix J

Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) Alignment

SDG

Contribution

SDG 3

Good Health and Well-Being

SDG 8

Decent Work and Economic Growth

SDG 9

Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure

SDG 11

Sustainable Cities and Communities

SDG 12

Responsible Consumption and Production

SDG 13

Climate Action

SDG 14

Life Below Water

SDG 15

Life on Land

SDG 17

Partnerships for the Goals

 

Appendix K

Case Teaching Notes

Learning Objectives

  1. Understand circular economy principles.
  2. Analyze waste-to-wealth business models.
  3. Evaluate sustainable packaging alternatives.
  4. Compare environmental and economic impacts.
  5. Develop policy recommendations for green manufacturing.

Discussion Questions

  1. Can sugarcane bagasse replace petroleum-based plastics at scale?
  2. How can India reduce the cost gap between bioplastics and conventional plastics?
  3. What role should government subsidies play?
  4. How can sugar mills become part of the circular economy ecosystem?
  5. What export opportunities exist for bagasse bioplastics?

Suggested Classroom Activities

  • Sustainability scorecard calculation.
  • SWOT analysis workshop.
  • Circular economy mapping exercise.
  • Cost-benefit analysis simulation.
  • Policy drafting exercise.

 

Appendix L

Future Research Framework (2026–2035)

Bagasse Waste
      
Cellulose Extraction
      
Nano-Biopolymer Development
      
AI-Based Production Optimization
      
Low-Cost Bioplastic Granules
      
Global Sustainable Packaging Market
      
Net-Zero Circular Economy

Appendix Summary: The appendices provide supplementary technical, environmental, economic, policy, and educational materials supporting the research findings and offer a comprehensive framework for future academic studies, industry implementation, and government policy development in sugarcane bagasse-based bioplastic granule manufacturing.

 

 

 

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"From Sugar Mills to Sustainable Markets: A Circular Economy Model for Converting Sugarcane Bagasse into Bioplastic Granules and Its Comparative Sustainability Assessment Against Conventional Petrochemical Plastics"

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