狠狠亚洲,奇米888在线看奇米999,美女**视频一级毛片,免费啪视频一区二区三区,高清国产在线,视频国产在线,欧美亚洲国产一区二区三区

Home About us News center Products Innovation Careers
industry news
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Flexible film waste-to-oil pilot project continuing in California
 
 

By Jim Johnson
SENIOR STAFF REPORTER
Published: August 19, 2014 3:19 pm ET
Updated: August 19, 2014 3:23 pm ET


Image By: Agilyx Corp.
The Energy Bag program is using Agilyx Corp.'s research and development facility in Tigard, Ore.


A recent decision to discontinue operations at a plastics waste-to-oil site in Portland, Ore., is not impacting a pilot program aimed at hard-to-recycle plastics in California.

The Energy Bag program launched this summer in Citrus Heights, Calif., to capture plastics that are typically not recycled.

Segregated in a special purple bag distributed to residents, these plastics are being sent to Agilyx Corp.’s research and development facility in Tigard, Ore., according to Dow Chemical Co., one of the sponsors of the project.

Waste Management Inc.’s decision was to discontinue operations at a commercial scale Portland site owned by the waste company that used Agilyx technology.

“This will not affect our pilot as we are using their R&D facility,” a Dow spokeswoman said in an email.

Dow Chemical is partnering with Republic Services Inc. and the Flexible Packaging Association to determine the viability of the Energy Bag program in Citrus Heights during a summer-long pilot.

Republic Services, the nation’s second largest waste management company, is diverting the purple bags containing plastics to Agilyx. The special bags are placed in the same single-stream recycling containers as other, more traditional recyclables. Containing them in a special bag helps workers separate those plastics to be sent along to Agilyx.

Marla Donahue, president of the FPA, recently traveled to California to witness the pilot program first-hand. She confirmed the program is continuing.

“Our stuff is going to the Agilyx-owned and operated unit,” Donahue said, “… so there’s no impact on the Energy Bag.”

There’s hope among organizers that the Energy Bag pilot program will prove to be successful in Citrus Heights and then spread to other communities.

Donahue said the impact of the decision to close the Portland site by Waste Management on the ability to grow the Energy Bag program is unclear at this point.

“Is this going to slow progress on the Energy Bag? I don’t know. We’ll see,” she said.

Agilyx has said it expects to have the next generation of its plastics-to-oil technology — generation six — in place by the fourth quarter of next year. Waste Management shuttered the Portland site that used generation five technology after indicating it learned what it needed to learn from the operation.

The new generation of technology will feature a continuous feed plastic processing system rather than a batch approach.

 
About us
company profile
company culture
version and strategy
company history
certification
patents
contact
News center
company news
industry news
media focus
video
Products
products catalog
technical support
Innovation
create value
production line
QA&QC
new technique info
Copyright:King-Tech China Co.,Ltd
巴南区| 象山县| 灵山县| 东丰县| 芦山县| 泗洪县| 荆门市| 扎囊县| 杂多县| 平阴县| 新密市| 孟津县| 西城区| 嵊泗县| 丰宁| 基隆市| 绍兴市| 册亨县| 临西县| 安泽县| 江川县| 东乡族自治县| 云霄县| 北安市| 礼泉县| 新营市| 西安市| 英超| 黄陵县| 南昌县| 化州市| 方城县| 金沙县| 永善县| 商河县| 东乡族自治县| 锡林郭勒盟| 竹溪县| 万安县| 宜宾县| 开封市|