Project

Innovative biotech routes for efficient bio-based solvent production promoting a safe and sustainable European industry.

Acronym
SOLRESS
Code
41J06725
Duration
01 September 2025 → 30 August 2029
Funding
European funding: various
Research disciplines
  • Engineering and technology
    • Industrial biotechnology not elsewhere classified
Keywords
Bio-based products
 
Project description

The main objective of the SOLRESS project is to propose an integrated biorefinery system to replace the chemical origin of some of
the most widely used solvents in the industry, such as ethyl acetate, ethyl lactate and butyl acetate with a bio-based origin from
second generation sugars from post-consumer coffee grounds and lignocellulosic feedstocks. The aim is to reinforce the integration
of bio-based research and innovation throughout industrial bio-based systems. Moreover, in the valorisation process of these
feedstocks, not only the cellulose fraction will be valorised, but also the hemicellulose fraction to obtain 2 of the most notorious green
solvents of today, 2-MeTHF and GVL, from an additional line dedicated to the processing of furfural. The challenges will lie in
improving downstream purification (DSP) processes and the techniques employed to achieve a technology that is efficient and costcompetitive with current chemical production systems for solvents.
At the end of the project, all solvents will be validated in at least 3 of the most relevant applications (productive processes,
formulations and recycling technologies) & at least 3 of the sectors with the greatest use of solvents (paints & coatings, cosmetics &
materials processing) with the aim of evaluating its performance in comparison with its fossil-based counterparts, but also as a
replacement for other dangerous and toxic solvents, such as NMP, CCL4, THF or toluene.
Thus, the ambition of the SOLRESS project is triple:
To replace the use of fossil, non-renewable raw materials with specific bio-based feedstocks in the production of some of the most
widely used solvents.
Offer SSbD alternatives to controversial solvents in terms of danger & toxicity (including the ones under the SVHC & SoCs categories).
To improve the competitiveness of these processes by incorporating new methods & technologies that increase efficiency &
sustainability, demonstrating their scalability & industrial applicability.