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Sugar Cane

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Originally published 1993
Authors Paul Bailey
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Date of Upd.
ID2991761
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About Sugar Cane


A sequel to Gabriel's Lament that features the story of Dr Esther Potocki, a venerologist at a London hospital.

Can tech stop India wasting so much of its harvest?

Can tech stop India wasting so much of its harvest?
Oct 2,2023 11:21 pm

... He grows Sugar Cane because it has a long shelf life...

Small shops call for aid to tackle 'brazen' shoplifters

Small shops call for aid to tackle 'brazen' shoplifters
Sep 15,2023 9:11 pm

... Another staff member was attacked with a stick of Sugar Cane...

Confectionery firms try to sugar coat price rises

Confectionery firms try to sugar coat price rises
May 10,2023 9:21 pm

... For Brazil, the world s biggest producer of Sugar Cane, this would mean reduced yields, as the water would both disrupt harvesting and lower the sucrose content of the plants...

Trevelyan descendant 'would consider' Irish famine compensation

Trevelyan descendant 'would consider' Irish famine compensation
May 1,2023 3:11 am

... Asked why the Trevelyan family would pay compensation to Grenada over slavery and not to Ireland over the famine, Ms Trevelyan said her ancestors were personally profiting from the sale of Sugar Cane harvested by enslaved Africans in the Caribbean, while Sir Charles was carrying out government policy...

Chinese eagerly await return of panda from US zoo

Chinese eagerly await return of panda from US zoo
Apr 11,2023 9:50 am

... Ya Ya was surrounded by bamboo and given a special ice cake made of grapes, Sugar Cane, and cookies, according to pictures and videos shared online...

Laura Trevelyan: My slavery link to MP shows reality of reparations

Laura Trevelyan: My slavery link to MP shows reality of reparations
Apr 1,2023 10:01 pm

... Although Ms Trevelyan s ancestors never set foot on Grenada, they were involved in and profited from multiple Sugar Cane plantations on the island...

Lab-grown alternatives aim to cut palm oil dependence

Lab-grown alternatives aim to cut palm oil dependence
Jan 15,2023 8:11 pm

... The yeast is fed on sugars from Sugar Cane plants grown on land already used for arable farming...

Richard Drax: Jamaica eyes slavery reparations from Tory MP

Richard Drax: Jamaica eyes slavery reparations from Tory MP
Nov 29,2022 8:40 pm

... The 617-acre Drax Hall plantation in Barbados was passed down the family line until the MP inherited the estate, where Sugar Cane is still grown, from his father in 2017...

Lab-grown alternatives aim to cut palm oil dependence

Nov 4,2022 1:11 am

By Katherine LathamReporting

It was landing at Singapore's International Airport a decade ago that sparked Shara Ticku's idea to create a lab-grown alternative to Palm Oil .

" In 2013 I flew to Singapore, and when I landed I had to wear a mask, " says The Boss of US tech firm C16 Biosciences. " The air was toxic because they were burning the rainforest in Indonesia. "

Indonesian farmers, who were clearing land for Palm Oil and other crops, and The Smoke that drifted across The Sea to Singapore.

Fast Forward to today, and her business has just commercially released an alternative to Palm Oil that is created from yeast cells.

Palm Oil remains The World 's most-produced Vegetable Oil , accounting for 40% of the total,

It is supremely popular with food and cosmetics firms because it is so useful. Odourless, tasteless and colourless, it doesn't alter The Smell , taste or look of products.

Instead it adds a smooth texture, and works as a natural preservative. And it maintains its properties under high temperatures, also Making It ideal for cooking with.

In fact it is so widely used, that Palm Oil or its derivatives are found in almost half of all products on Supermarket shelves, according to the WWF. This includes everything from chocolate, to shampoo, pizza, toothpaste, and deodorant.

" No matter how hard you try, every single person touches Palm Oil everyday, " says Ms Ticku. " It is in everything. "

The widely-documented problem with this usage is that this demand for Palm Oil has led to significant deforestation in areas where oil Palm Trees can grow - low-lying, hot, wet areas near the equator.

The use of this land for Palm Oil cultivation, 85% of which is in Indonesia and Malaysia, has increased

In financial terms, one report valued the worldwide Palm Oil industry And such is the continuing growth in demand, this figure is expected to increase to $75. 7bn by 2028.

To try to reduce The World 's reliance on Palm Oil , Ms Ticku, who was formerly an investment banker, and her co-founders Set Up C16 Biosciences in New York City in 2018. Backed by multi-million dollar funding from Microsoft founder Bill Gates , The Company has spent The Past Four Years developing and finessing their product, which is called Palmless.

They grow a strain of yeast that naturally produces an oil with very similar properties to palm, which they harvest. The yeast is fed on sugars from Sugar Cane plants grown on land already used for arable farming.

" Our process takes less than Seven Days from start to finish, " says a spokeswoman for C16 Biosciences. " For a traditional oil palm tree, the oil wouldn't be ready to harvest until years after the seed is planted, and most trees don't reach peak production until seven years later. "

She adds that The Company is now " actively collaborating on partnerships in The Beauty and home Categories - for example, moisturisers, nourishing oils, soaps and cancels". " [And] we plan to enter into food in 2024. "

Another reason for the continuing popularity of Palm Oil is that it is very productive.

" You get so much more oil per hectare [from Oil Palms ] than any other oil crop, " says Chris Chuck, professor of bioprocess engineering at the University of Bath. " Oil Palms produce about 5,000 kg [of oil] per hectare per year, rapeseed about 1,000 kg per hectare per year, and soybean 400 kg per hectare per year. "

Using other edible oils might take pressure off Tropical Forests , he says, but you'd be sacrificing much more land to agriculture elsewhere.

To reduce demand for Palm Oil , Prof Chuck leads another team that has created its own yeast-sourced alternative.

Prof Chuck says that he and his Colleagues - biologists, chemists, mechanical engineers, chemical engineers and food scientists - worked hard to find a yeast that was sufficiently robust and produced high oil yields.

" You put the yeast in a horrendous environment, forcing it to evolve so it can survive. You're simply speeding up a natural process, " he explains.

After hundreds of generations of yeast, and years of trial and error, they arrived at a unique strain called Metschnikowia Pulcherrima , or MP for short.

MP is said to be hardy and not fussy what it eats. It can be fed on grass and food waste. And at The Point of harvesting, its cells are full of oil.

Even the leftover yeast cell biomass need not go to waste. It can be used for other products, for example creating a substitute for soya protein.

Prof Chuck says the aim is for the oil to be as sustainable as possible.

" In The Best case scenarios we've modelled, " he says, " it could be even just a couple of percent of The Greenhouse gas emissions from Palm Oil grown in Indonesia or Malaysia. "

After a successful pilot, The Team is now ramping up to industrial scale. And a private business has been formed called Clean Food Group, which recently partnered with a yet to be revealed UK Supermarket .

is a series exploring how technological innovation is set to shape the new emerging economic landscape.

Prof Chuck hopes that in five years, we could see 500,000-litre bioreactors, similar to those used by major breweries, producing the yeast - and giving Palm Oil a run for its money.

So, can We Live without Palm Oil ? Lab-developed alternatives could become a crucial tool in combating Climate Change caused by deforestation, plus preventing Biodiversity Loss and future food insecurity.

" There 's a lot of excitement and hype - a lot of people rushing into this space. And that's great, " says Prof Chuck. " The mounds of oil produced globally are so enormous - There 's space for everybody. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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