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bioeconomy

The bioeconomy is the part of the economy that uses renewable biological resources—such as crops, forests, and aquatic biomass—and related biotechnologies to produce food, energy, chemicals, materials, and services. It aims to substitute fossil resources with bio-based processes while promoting sustainable production and circularity.

Key components include agriculture, forestry, and fisheries; industrial biotechnology and biorefineries that convert biomass into biofuels,

Policies support the bioeconomy through national strategies, funding, and research infrastructure. In Europe, Asia, and the

Challenges include competition between food and non-food uses for biomass, land and water constraints, biodiversity impacts,

The bioeconomy is often discussed as part of a broader transition toward a circular and low-carbon economy,

biochemicals,
and
bioproducts;
and
data-driven
approaches
such
as
precision
agriculture,
genomic
selection,
and
synthetic
biology.
Americas,
governments
seek
to
mobilize
investments
to
create
jobs,
reduce
greenhouse
gas
emissions,
and
strengthen
rural
development.
Metrics
focus
on
the
share
of
value
added
from
bio-based
products,
life-cycle
environmental
performance,
and
feedstock
sustainability.
technological
and
economic
viability
at
scale,
and
regulatory
and
public
acceptance
issues
for
new
biotechnologies.
integrating
with
sustainability
goals
and
international
development
agendas.