Kerala: CSIR–NIIST and start-up join hands to validate fruit-based bioethanol technology 
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Hyderabad start-up partners with CSIR–NIIST to turn fruit pulp into fuel

CSIR–NIIST and 3CousinLabs have launched a pilot project to convert surplus and waste fruit pulp into sustainable bioethanol to boost India’s renewable energy ecosystem

IANS

Thiruvananthapuram, July 2 (IANS): In a move that could open new avenues for sustainable biofuel production and reduce post-harvest losses in the horticulture sector, CSIR–National Institute for Interdisciplinary Science and Technology (CSIR–NIIST) at Thiruvananthapuram has entered into a partnership with Hyderabad-based biotechnology start-up 3CousinLabs (3CL) to evaluate the commercial potential of producing ethanol from seasonal fruits.

The collaboration, formalised through a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed on Thursday, will focus on a consultancy project titled "Pilot-Scale and Feasibility Studies for the Production of Ethanol from Fruit Pulp and Juices".

The MoU was exchanged between CSIR–NIIST Director C. Anandharamakrishnan and 3CousinLabs Managing Director P. Srinivas in the presence of scientists, company representatives and project collaborators.

The project seeks to assess the technical and commercial feasibility of converting a wide range of seasonal fruits available in Andhra Pradesh and Telangana into bioethanol.

The technology, developed by 3CousinLabs, is designed to transform fruit pulp and juices into ethanol, with CSIR–NIIST providing pilot-scale validation, process optimisation and engineering support before commercial deployment.

As part of the study, CSIR–NIIST will conduct pilot-scale trials in batches of 150–200 litres to generate critical engineering data for technology validation, scale-up and techno-economic assessment.

The findings are expected to support the establishment of decentralised bioethanol production units that utilise locally available seasonal fruits.

The initiative offers a productive use for surplus, unsold and processing-grade fruits that are often wasted because of their perishable nature.

Converting such produce into bioethanol could help reduce post-harvest losses, improve resource efficiency and create an additional income stream for farmers and farmer producer organisations.

The project is also aligned with the Centre's Ethanol Blended Petrol (EBP) Programme, which encourages diversification of feedstocks for ethanol production to strengthen India's renewable energy ecosystem and bioeconomy.

Officials said the technology could also contribute to rural livelihoods by creating new markets for seasonal fruits and promoting value addition within the horticulture sector while advancing circular economy principles through the conversion of agricultural surplus into clean, renewable energy.

3CousinLabs, incubated at the Atal Incubation Centre–Centre for Cellular and Molecular Biology Medical Biotechnology Complex in Hyderabad, has developed processes to produce bioethanol from fruits such as mango, pineapple, watermelon, jackfruit and tomato.

The pilot-scale validation at CSIR–NIIST is expected to pave the way for wider industrial adoption of the technology.

This report was published from a syndicated wire feed. Apart from the headline, the EdexLive Desk has not edited the copy.

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