JRC Policy Brief Highlights Technology Readiness and High Costs as Key Barriers to Bio-based Plastics in Europe

Navigating Barriers to Scale Bio-based Plastics Revolution in Europe

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Unlocking the Potential of Bio-based Plastics in Europe Amid Key Challenges

The European Union's Joint Research Centre (JRC) has released a timely policy brief titled "Bio-based plastics in a sustainable and circular bioeconomy," shedding light on the promising yet constrained role of bio-based plastics in transitioning away from fossil fuels. 109 20 These materials, derived from renewable biomass such as sugars, starch, and vegetable oils, represent just 0.5% of global plastics production in 2025, with a capacity of 2.3 million tonnes amid over 431 million tonnes total. 121 In Europe, the sector adds €3.2 billion in value and supports 57,000 jobs, signaling untapped economic potential if barriers are addressed.

This brief arrives as the EU pushes its Bioeconomy Strategy and Packaging and Packaging Waste Regulation (PPWR), aiming for bio-based content targets by 2027. Yet, technology readiness and high production costs emerge as primary hurdles to widespread adoption, prompting calls for targeted policies to foster scalability.

Defining Bio-based Plastics: From Biomass to Polymers

Bio-based plastics (full name: biological resource-based plastics) are polymers produced from renewable organic sources rather than petroleum. The JRC categorizes them into three types: attributed bio-based (certified biomass co-fed into fossil processes), drop-in bio-based (chemically identical to fossil counterparts, recyclable in existing systems), and dedicated bio-based (unique biomass-derived polymers, often biodegradable). 109 Unlike biodegradability, which depends on specific conditions, bio-based content is measured via standards like EN 16640.

Common examples include polylactic acid (PLA) from corn starch and polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA) from microbial fermentation. While they promise lower lifecycle greenhouse gas emissions, not all are compostable, and end-of-life management varies—drop-ins integrate with mechanical recycling, while dedicated types may require industrial composting.

Europe's Bio-based Plastics Market: Growth Amid Limitations

Europe leads in bioplastics innovation, with the market valued at around €5.35 billion in 2023 and projected to reach €29.21 billion by 2033 at 18% CAGR. 36 Packaging dominates at 41.3% of global capacity (0.95 million tonnes in 2025), followed by automotive at 10.3%. 121 Global capacity is set to double to 4.69 million tonnes by 2030, but Europe's share remains modest due to fossil plastics' dominance.

Utilization rates hover at 72-73%, reflecting steady demand from brands like Danone and IKEA. However, the JRC notes bio-based plastics will barely hit 1% globally by 2030 without intervention, as total plastics demand surges. 109

Technology Readiness Levels: Maturity Gaps Slowing Scale-Up

Technology Readiness Levels (TRL, a scale from 1-9 where 9 is full commercial deployment) reveal uneven progress. Drop-in bio-PE and bio-PP reach TRL 9, but many dedicated polymers like PHA lag at TRL 6-8, requiring pilot scaling. 109 53 The JRC highlights knowledge gaps in environmental impacts and sorting/recycling compatibility, complicating infrastructure integration.

  • TRL 9: Bio-PE, bio-PP (compatible with fossil recycling streams).
  • TRL 7-8: PLA, PHA (industrial production but scaling challenges).
  • Lower TRL: Advanced microbial or lignocellulosic routes (feedstock conversion inefficiencies).

Projects like ReBioCycle address this by demonstrating sorting and recycling at TRL 7, proving bio-based biodegradables can loop in circular systems. 110

Chart illustrating TRL levels for various bio-based plastics polymers

High Costs: The Economic Hurdle 1.5-2 Times Fossil Prices

Bio-based plastics cost 1.5 to 2 times more than fossil equivalents due to expensive feedstocks, nascent processes, and scale inefficiencies. 109 Fossil routes benefit from cheap oil (€50-100/tonne naphtha) versus biomass (€500-1000/tonne glucose equivalents). As capacities grow, prices may converge, but policy level-playing fields are needed.

PolymerBio-based Cost (€/tonne)Fossil Cost (€/tonne)
PE1500-20001000-1200
PLA2000-2500N/A
PHA3000+N/A

Data approximated from industry reports; economies of scale could reduce gaps by 20-30% by 2030.

Read the full JRC policy brief

Feedstock Sustainability: Limited Supply and Competition

Agricultural residues and waste oils are ideal but scarce; first-generation crops compete with food. JRC stresses cascading use, certification (e.g., ISCC), and due diligence to protect biodiversity. 109 Europe's biomass demand outstrips supply, risking imports and land-use change.

Solutions include lignocellulosic (wood/agri-waste) processes at higher TRL via Horizon Europe funding.

EU Policies Driving the Transition

The 2025 EU Bioeconomy Strategy sets bio-based targets in PPWR, aligning with Green Deal and Circular Economy Action Plan. Measures include content quotas, fossil bans in packaging, and labeling. 71 Horizon Europe allocates billions for bioeconomy R&D.

For academics and researchers eyeing this field, explore research jobs across Europe on AcademicJobs.com.

Case Studies: Pioneering Projects and Companies

Avantium (Netherlands) scales PEF bottles (TRL 8), rivaling PET with 70% less CO2. 122 Sulapac (Finland) offers wood-based alternatives biodegrading like leaves. 131 ReBioCycle demonstrates hub-based recycling for PLA/PHA. 110

  • TotalEnergies Corbion: PLA production in Thailand/EU expansion.
  • Novamont (Italy): Mater-Bi starch blends for films.
Sulapac bio-based material in cosmetics packaging

Stakeholder Views: Industry, Regulators, and Researchers

European Bioplastics calls for demand-side policies; industry notes consumer acceptance at 73% for eco-products. 132 Critics highlight land-use trade-offs, urging LCA transparency.

Researchers advocate funding for TRL advancement; check career advice for bioeconomy roles.

Overcoming Barriers: Recommendations and Actionable Insights

JRC proposes mandatory bio-content shares, R&D incentives, and extended producer responsibility. Step-by-step scaling: 1) Certify feedstocks, 2) Pilot TRL 7-9 demos, 3) Policy quotas, 4) Infrastructure for sorting/composting.

ReBioCycle project site

Future Outlook: A Bio-based Plastics Boom by 2030?

With policies, Europe could triple capacity, capturing 20% global share. Projections: €29B market by 2033, but requires €10B+ investments. For professionals, opportunities abound in higher ed jobs and university jobs in sustainable materials.

Visit AcademicJobs Europe for openings. Share your insights in comments below.

Frequently Asked Questions

🔬What are bio-based plastics?

Bio-based plastics are polymers made from renewable biomass like starch or oils, categorized as attributed, drop-in, or dedicated types per JRC definitions.

📊What does the JRC policy brief say about market share?

Bio-based plastics hold 0.5% of global production (2.3M tonnes capacity in 2025), projected to double by 2030 but still under 1% without policy boosts.

💰Why are costs higher for bio-based plastics?

Production costs are 1.5-2x fossil plastics due to feedstock prices and scale; solutions include subsidies and mandates for demand creation.

⚙️What are TRL levels for key bio-based polymers?

Bio-PE/PP at TRL 9; PLA/PHA at 7-8; advanced routes lower, needing R&D per JRC and industry reports.

🏛️How does EU policy support bio-based plastics?

2025 Bioeconomy Strategy and PPWR set targets; Green Deal funds innovation via Horizon Europe. More on strategy.

🌾What are main feedstock challenges?

Limited sustainable waste streams; competition with food/energy; JRC urges certification and cascading use.

🏭Name European companies leading bio-based plastics.

Avantium (PEF), Sulapac (wood-based), Novamont (Mater-Bi), TotalEnergies Corbion (PLA).

🔄What is ReBioCycle project?

EU-funded demo for sorting/recycling biodegradables at TRL 7, enhancing circularity. Related research jobs.

💡Recommendations from JRC brief?

Bio-content quotas, labeling, R&D funding, fossil bans to level playing field.

🔮Future projections for Europe?

Market to €29B by 2033 at 18% CAGR; jobs growth if barriers overcome. Explore higher ed jobs in sustainability.

Are bio-based plastics always biodegradable?

No; depends on polymer—e.g., bio-PE not, PLA yes under composting.