Transfer station for acetic acid

WACKER has biomass-balance method certified by TÜV SÜD

Oct 01, 2018 Read time: approx. MinutesMinute

VAE Binders Based on Renewable Resources

WACKER is the world’s first manufacturer capable of using renewable resources to produce commercial quantities not only of dispersions based on vinyl acetate-ethylene copolymer (VAE), but also of further products based on vinyl acetate – all known by the VINNAPAS® brand. To do so, the company uses acetic acid generated as a byproduct in the woodworking industry.

TÜV SÜD, the international technical inspectorate and certification body, has certified WACKER’s biomass-balance method as meeting its international CMS 71 standard. Independent certification assures customers that WACKER has replaced the required quantities of fossil resources with an equivalent amount of renewables for its biomass-balanced products right at the start of production. WACKER markets this innovative product class under its VINNAPAS® eco line (formerly VINNECO®), encompassing all its polymer products based on renewables.

“More and more customers in construction, paints, adhesives, textiles and the paper industry value the use of renewable raw materials,” said Dr. Christoph Riemer, head of the Consumer & Industrial Polymers business unit at WACKER POLYMERS. “We can now meet that wish with our vinyl acetate-ethylene copolymers. Because sustainability begins early for us,” he added, “with the raw materials.” In the case of WACKER’s new polymer class, the acetic acid comes from the woodworking industry.

“Sustainability begins with the raw materials.”

Dr. Christoph Riemer, head of the Consumer & Industrial Polymers business unit at WACKER POLYMERS

PEFC® certified forest

The wood used to make the bio-acetic acid originates from sustainably managed forests that are PEFC® certified like this one.

The wood originates from sustainably managed forests that are PEFC® certified.

The bio-based acetic acid meets WACKER’s quality standards and is characterized by very high purity, very good color compatibility and very low water content. As a result, the bio-acetic acid’s chemical and physical behavior is identical with that of conventional, fossil acetic acid. What’s more, mixing both types of acetic acid does not affect the end product’s properties.


All of these aspects favor the biomass- balance method that WACKER uses to calculate how much VAE dispersion was produced from renewable and, thus, non-fossil raw materials. The recently issued certificates verify that WACKER’s mass- balance method for VAE production meets the criteria of TÜV SÜD’s CMS 71 standard on the traceability of renewable resources. “We can now offer customers of VAE dispersions something comparable to the green electricity that consumers get from utilities,” said Dr. Markus Busold, strategic marketing director at Consumer & Industrial Polymers. “When customers order binders based on renewables, WACKER ensures that the required amount of bio-acetic acid has entered the production loop. And that kind of acetic acid comes solely from certified producers.”