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n“Our partners at the National Textile University in Faisalabad have developed a technology to convert banana agro waste into textile fibers, but the lack of electricity in rural Sindh, where the majority of the bananas are grown, has prevented this innovation from being scaled-up until now.”nn“Over the next year we will be working to develop a new waste-to-energy technology which will convert agro-waste into clean and affordable energy. This solution will benefit the textile industry, and local communities, as well as improving soil fertility and food production through the generation of biofertilizers,” he added.nnIt is estimated that the banana-growing industry in Pakistan could produce 57,488 million cubic meters of syngas, or synthesis gas as it is otherwise known, as well as 30 million tonnes of nitrogen-enriched biofertilizers.nnSyngas is a man-made gas which is created through chemical processes using waste products. It has a wide range of uses and is recognized as a greener way to generate electricity.nnSHARE This Great News For The Planet And For Rural Pakistan…

