# Sustainable Cellulose Production from Agro-Industrial Waste: A Comprehensive Review

**Authors:** Akmaral Darmenbayeva, Reshmy Rajasekharan, Zhanat Idrisheva, Roza Aubakirova, Zukhra Dautova, Gulzhan Abylkassova, Manira Zhamanbayeva, Irina Afanasenkova, Bakytgul Massalimova

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/polym18020153 · Polymers · 2026-01-06

## TL;DR

This paper reviews how agro-industrial waste can be used to produce sustainable cellulose, focusing on feedstock composition, processing methods, and environmental impacts.

## Contribution

The paper provides a comprehensive review of cellulose production from agro-industrial waste, emphasizing sustainability and process efficiency.

## Key findings

- Cellulose yield is influenced by feedstock composition, including lignin and hemicellulose content.
- Sustainability metrics like energy and water use are critical alongside cellulose yield for process design.
- Moderately processed cellulose from agro-waste can achieve high functional performance for specific applications.

## Abstract

The growing demand for sustainable and renewable materials has intensified interest in agro-industrial waste as an alternative source of cellulose. This review critically examines current approaches to cellulose production from major agro-industrial residues, including cereal straw, corn residues, rice waste, sugarcane bagasse, and oilseed by-products. Emphasis is placed on the relationship between feedstock composition and extraction efficiency, highlighting how lignin distribution, hemicellulose content, and mineral impurities influence pretreatment severity, cellulose yield, and process sustainability. The review systematically analyzes chemical, enzymatic, and mechanical processing routes, with particular attention being paid to pretreatment strategies, fibrillation intensity, and yield variability. Beyond cellulose recovery, key sustainability indicators—such as energy demand, water and chemical consumption, waste generation, and chemical recovery—are evaluated to provide a system-level perspective on process efficiency. The analysis demonstrates that cellulose yield alone is an insufficient criterion for sustainable process design and must be considered alongside environmental and techno-economic metrics. Advanced applications of agro-waste-derived cellulose are discussed using a feedstock-driven approach, showing that high functional performance can often be achieved with moderately processed cellulose tailored to specific end uses. Finally, the review addresses challenges related to feedstock heterogeneity, mineral management, standardization, and industrial scale-up, underscoring the importance of biorefinery integration, closed-loop resource management, and harmonized quality descriptors. These insights provide a foundation for the development of scalable and sustainable cellulose production pathways based on agro-industrial waste.

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** lignin (MESH:D008031), Cellulose (MESH:D002482), hemicellulose (MESH:C007916)
- **Species:** Oryza sativa (Asian cultivated rice, species) [taxon 4530]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

91 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12846302/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12846302