bagasse - definition. What is bagasse
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%ما هو (من)٪ 1 - تعريف

PULPY RESIDUE LEFT AFTER THE EXTRACTION OF JUICE FROM SUGAR CANE
Baggasse; Sugar cane residue; Baggase; Megass
  • Sugarcane bagasse in [[Hainan]], China
  • Sugarcane bagasse piled outside a mill, to be used as fuel for the mill's boilers. Thakurgaon Sugar Mills Ltd. Bangladesh. (02.03.2019)
  • Calheta]], [[Madeira]]. The bagasse falls down a chute and is removed on a conveyor belt below.
  • Bagasse covered with blue plastic outside a sugar mill in [[Proserpine, Queensland]]

Bagasse         
·noun Sugar cane, as it comes crushed from the mill. It is then dried and used as fuel. Also extended to the refuse of beetroot sugar.
bagasse         
[b?'gas]
¦ noun the dry pulpy residue left after the extraction of juice from sugar cane.
Origin
C19: from Fr., from Sp. bagazo 'pulp'.
Bagasse         
Bagasse ( ) is the dry pulpy fibrous material that remains after crushing sugarcane or sorghum stalks to extract their juice. It is used as a biofuel for the production of heat, energy, and electricity, and in the manufacture of pulp and building materials.

ويكيبيديا

Bagasse

Bagasse ( bə-GAS) is the dry pulpy fibrous material that remains after crushing sugarcane or sorghum stalks to extract their juice. It is used as a biofuel for the production of heat, energy, and electricity, and in the manufacture of pulp and building materials. Agave bagasse is similar, but is the material remnants after extracting blue agave sap.

أمثلة من مجموعة نصية لـ٪ 1
1. At the sugar plants in Brazil, operators say they believe the future is already on display: Most of the plants burn bagasse, the leftover tissue from the sugar cane stalks, to power the production facilities.
2. The plant supplies its own electrical power by burning the crushed outer stalk of the cane, known as bagasse . Exact comparisons are hard to come by, but mill manager Mario Ortiz Gandini said the mill can produce sugar for less than half the price of U.S. ethanol from corn.
3. It plans to develop alternative uses of sugar and sugar cane such as ethanol and bagasse–based electricity generation plants but Derick Heaven, executive chairman of Jamaica‘s sugar industry authority, says pleas for more time and adequate compensation have fallen on deaf ears.