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Powerhouse Energy Group

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Geweren_Gerrit
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Mooie eindspurt vandaag. Iets of iemand opgevallen of er komt nieuws. Kan zelf nieuws vinden
nine_inch_nerd
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New facility in Scotland to turn waste plastic into hydrogen
John MaxJune 4, 2021
New facility in Scotland to turn waste plastic into hydrogen
Peel NRE, a part of Peel Land & Property, has unveiled its plans for a second waste plastic to hydrogen facility. This one will be installed on the River Clyde’s north bank at the Rothesay Dock in West Dunbartonshire.

The facility will cost £20 million (USD$28.3 million) and will use non-recyclable plastics.

The waste plastic to hydrogen facility will use non-recyclable plastics that would otherwise be sent to the landfill, would be incinerated, or would be shipped overseas. The goal is to use this material as a sustainable hydrogen source. The H2 produced at the facility will be used as a zero-emission fuel for powering HGVs, buses and cars. The intention is to install a linked H2 refueling station at the site.

The 13,500-metric tonne facility represents the second of its nature in the United Kingdom. They are using new technologies developed by Powerhouse Energy Group plc (LON stock symbol PHE), following the development of its plans for a similar facility located at the Cheshire Peel NRE Protos site, which received approval in 2019.


The waste plastic to hydrogen facility will create a practical purpose for problematic forms of trash.

“Plastic is often demonised, but we have seen how essential it is in industries like healthcare. We do need to recycle as much of this plastic as possible and also get as much value from unrecyclable, end-of-life plastic. This facility will convert plastic into hydrogen a clean fuel that produces no emissions at the point of use, helping to improve local air quality. By co-locating a refuelling station, we can help to kick start the infrastructure needed to support the rollout of hydrogen vehicles which will be an important part of our journey to net zero,” said Peel NRE Director Richard Barker.

Powerhouse Energy executive chair Tim Yeo added, “We are delighted Powerhouse technology is to be deployed in Scotland, helping the region improve air quality and provide a solution to end-of-life plastic. This new facility will play an important role in supporting the objective of both Holyrood and Westminster to make hydrogen a key element of Scotland’s decarbonisation strategy.” He also pointed Waste plastic - Renewable Hydrogen News - Pick it up here and save the oceanto the importance of this waste plastic to hydrogen plant as the world places the spotlight on Scotland for the upcoming COP26 meeting in Glasgow later in 2021.
nine_inch_nerd
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Oud bericht maar toch fijn om nog een terug te kijken en te lezen.

www.protos.co.uk/news/peel-environmen...


Peel Environmental calls for £7.5bn investment in Plastic Parks across the UK

Protos

Mar 16, 2020 | News

Waste and infrastructure business Peel Environmental – part of Peel L&P – has said that the UK needs to invest over £7.5bn in infrastructure to deal with plastic waste over the next 10 years.

The company has set out a vision for ‘Plastic Parks’ across the UK which would revolutionise the way that plastic waste is currently handled. The parks would provide a complete solution for the 4.9 million tonnes of plastic waste generated in the UK each year, preventing it ending up in landfill, exported overseas or in the ocean.

With the first one planned for Peel Environmental’s Protos site in Cheshire, the Plastic Parks will deal with plastic waste where recycling has previously not been a viable option. They will take plastic that’s at the end of its life, maximising what can be removed for recycling, with the remaining non-recyclable plastic used to create electricity, hydrogen or other products.

Working in partnership with Waste2Tricity, Peel Environmental has thrown its support behind pioneering waste plastic to hydrogen technology that is set to revolutionise the waste market while kick-starting the emerging hydrogen economy in the UK. The company has signed an exclusivity agreement to deploy the PowerHouse Energy Group (AIM:PHE) technology in the UK. The first facility is set to be developed at Protos, as part of the first Plastic Park, having recently been granted planning consent.

Other technologies to feature at the Plastic Parks will break plastic back into its component parts to reduce reliance on virgin fossil fuels. With a network of Plastic Parks envisaged across the UK, each one can be tailored to local needs, providing local councils with the comfort that their plastic waste is being handled responsibly.

Myles Kitcher, Managing Director, Peel Environmental – part of Peel L&P – said:

“Infrastructure for dealing with plastic waste has been piecemeal at best and there’s a huge problem with accountability. Local authorities and businesses often have no idea that their plastics are being exported overseas where it has more chance of finding its way into the ocean.

“It’s right that we should be having the debate about plastic, but we’re not going to rid it from society overnight. In many cases plastic will continue to be the most sustainable and cost effective option, for example its many uses in the medical industry. Rather than demonising all plastics, we need to reduce and re-use what we can, recycle after that and then find better solutions for what’s left. The technologies we’re looking at will provide solutions for plastics that up until now haven’t had a value. But we fully expect them to be transitional technologies which in the short term make a positive difference until we can reduce our plastic consumption.”

Currently there are only a handful of local councils that can take all plastics for recycling, with multiple collection regimes causing confusion among householders. Even materials that are easily recyclable, such as trays made from polypropylene, are often not recycled as not all councils have access to the right facilities.

Myles continued: “Kerbside recycling systems are confusing at best with many plastic products still ending up in the black bin and sent to landfill. The Plastic Parks will offer a simple solution for local councils. We can take any type of plastic, whether it’s been mixed or separated, and we’ll have a one-stop-shop for maximising recycling and creating value from what’s left. We see a network of Plastic Parks across the UK where the technologies can be tailored to local needs.”

“The really exciting part is that this can happen quickly and it is a simple and cost effective solution. Householders can put everything in one bin and be safe in the knowledge that the plastic is either going to be recycled or used to create energy, fuels or other products.”

Chairman of Waste2Tricity, Tim Yeo said:

“We are proud to be an integral part of Peel’s visionary ‘Plastic Parks’, delivering an innovative solution to the plastic problem we face here in the UK. Not only will PowerHouse Energy’s pioneering DMG® (Distributed Modular Generation) technology provide an innovative solution to the plastic problem faced here in the UK but it will be producing low-cost hydrogen – a fuel of the future and one which many are recognising as being vital to getting to net zero emissions.”

The Plastics Parks concept is part of Peel L&P’s wider sustainability commitments and contribution to net zero emissions in the UK. As part of a five-year sustainability plan, the company has committed to identifying unnecessary single-use plastics across the business and replacing them with more sustainable alternatives. Additional targets include zero waste to landfill, a 20% increase in recycled waste, 20% reduction in water use and a 15% reduction in energy use. It was also recently announced that Peel L&P is the first property company to achieve Net Zero Carbon status for 11 offices using the UK Green Building Council’s 2019 definition for buildings in the UK.
nine_inch_nerd
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Powerhouse Appoints Chief Technical Officer
25th Jun 2021

Powerhouse Energy Group plc (AIM: PHE), the sustainable hydrogen company turning non-recyclable plastic waste into hydrogen, is delighted to announce the appointment of Paul Emmitt as Chief Technical Officer with immediate effect.

This is a new non-board position which has been created in anticipation of David Ryan’s forthcoming retirement as Chief Executive Officer of Powerhouse on 30 June 2021.

Mr Emmitt is Managing Director of Engsolve Limited the engineering consultancy with whom Powerhouse has worked very closely for the last four years. In this capacity he has been deeply involved in the development of Powerhouse technology, having been part of the development of the DMG® process from the building and operation of the demonstration unit, through to the current position.

Paul Emiitt
Powerhouse will employ Mr Emmitt directly for two days a week, allowing him to continue in his present role at Engsolve during the balance of his time. Mr Emmitt will take over Mr Ryan’s responsibilities for Powerhouse’s technology development programme, including all its design, research and project technical assurance activities. He will also be responsible for the first application of the Powerhouse technology at Protos and will work closely with the management of Protos Plastics to Hydrogen No. 1 Limited, the SPV which is building the first commercial scale DMG plant, to help achieve the timely completion of this project.

As a Chartered Materials Engineer and Chartered Environmental Engineer, Paul Emmitt holds an MBA in Engineering Management and has over 20 years’ experience in engineering and operational management both in the UK and overseas. His experience encompasses work in the oil, gas, energy-from-waste and chemical industries.

As founder and Managing Director of Engsolve he has considerable knowledge of both energy-from-waste technology and markets.

Tim Yeo, Executive Chairman of Powerhouse Energy said: “I warmly welcome Paul’s appointment. His close and long-standing involvement with the development of our technology makes him the ideal candidate for this important new post which has been created to ensure that our technical and engineering team continues to have strong leadership after David Ryan’s retirement. Paul will attend Powerhouse board meetings and will bring valuable knowledge and experience to our discussions.”

Paul Emmitt said: “I am delighted to be joining the Powerhouse team and are thrilled to be able to continue to be part of the development of this unique and pioneering technology. I look forward to working with the team to facilitate the completion of the first commercial scale DMG® plant which will bolster the UK’s hydrogen economy.”
nine_inch_nerd
0
We're pleased to announce that DNV, the international gas process design and certification consultancy, have completed stage one of the validation of the enhanced design to produce 2 tonnes per day of hydrogen. Read more here….

www.powerhouseenergy.co.uk/investors/...
nine_inch_nerd
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Peel NRE Signs Deal To Supply Hydrogen To Element 2 Refuelling Stations With First Planned At Protos

Peel NRE Hydrogen 2
Peel NRE, part of Peel L&P, has signed a Letter of Intent to supply hydrogen from its planned roll out of plastic to hydrogen facilities to Element 2‘s proposed network of hydrogen refuelling stations.

Peel NRE is proposing to develop a hydrogen refuelling station that will make hydrogen from the consented plastic to the hydrogen facility at Protos, the company’s strategic energy and resource hub in Cheshire. This will be able to supply up to one tonne of hydrogen per day, sufficient to fuel approximately 40 HGVs, 500 buses or 2,500 cars per day. There are also plans to develop a hydrogen refuelling station at Peel NRE’s planned plastic to hydrogen facility in North Clyde, near Glasgow.

The plastic to hydrogen facility at Protos is the first in the UK to use pioneering technology developed by Powerhouse Energy Group plc (AIM: PHE), with Peel NRE planning to roll out the technology across the UK. The plant will take non-recyclable plastics, destined for landfill, incineration, or export overseas, and uses them to create a local source of sustainable hydrogen. The hydrogen will be used as a clean fuel for buses, HGVs, Refuse Collection Vehicles, and cars, helping to improve local air quality.

The important role of hydrogen in decarbonising the transportation sector has been recognised by the Committee on Climate Change. The refuelling station at Protos will help to kick start the infrastructure needed to support the rollout of hydrogen vehicles which will be a vital part of the UK’s journey to net zero. Element 2 are looking to establish a network of hydrogen refuelling stations across the UK, with plans to deliver 2,000 by 2030, and is looking at further potential sites with Peel NRE.

Richard Barker, Development Director at Peel NRE, part of Peel L&P, said: “Hydrogen is set to play an important role in our journey to net zero, particularly in hard to decarbonise sectors like transport. Protos is the first of many planned plastic to hydrogen facilities in the UK and co-locating refuelling stations will help to kick start the infrastructure needed to support the rollout of hydrogen vehicles.”

Brendan Bilton, Chief Technology Officer, Element 2 said: “Our agreement with Peel NRE to build a hydrogen refuelling station at Protos is a big step forward as we establish the UK’s hydrogen infrastructure. We are a pure play retailer of hydrogen, keen to employ waste to hydrogen and the circular economy as we build hundreds of refuelling stations over the next ten years. We will deploy 800 pumps by 2027 and 2,000 pumps by 2030, helping the UK reach its target of net zero emissions my 2050.

The plastic to hydrogen facility and refuelling station is part of the Plastic Park planned at Protos. The £165m Plastic Park will cluster together a variety of plastic recycling and treatment technologies, each designed to get the most value from plastic waste. A planning application for the Plastic Park is expected later this year.
nine_inch_nerd
0
Link naar Powerhouse wordt gemaakt....

www.bbc.com/news/uk-57680723

Turkey's plastics ban: Where does the UK send its waste now?

By Angus Crawford
BBC News

Stock image of a woman putting plastic bottles into a recycling binGetty Images
The boy was probably only a teenager. Rummaging through bags of plastic dumped by the side of the road, he was looking for bottles to sell.

In amongst the rubbish, were plastic bags from some of the UK's biggest supermarkets, packaging for cheese, ham and beef burgers.

Our investigation in March 2020 in the southern Turkish City of Adana found that although plastic that had been carefully sorted and separated by households in the UK was being sent to Turkey for recycling, it was, instead, being fly tipped and burned.

Why is UK recycling being dumped by Turkish roadsides? (June 2020)
Now Ankara has had enough - from today, 2 July, almost all imports of plastic waste are expected to be banned.

This leaves the UK with a real problem.

Last year the UK sent more plastic packaging waste to Turkey than to any other country. More than 200,000 tonnes, or 30% of all such exports, according to the Environment Agency's national waste packaging database.

This means 30 shipping containers a day full of plastic waste now need a new home. The UK, however, doesn't have enough recycling capacity to handle it itself.

"The alternatives are not obvious," says Phil Conran from consultancy 360 Environmental.

China, which used to be the world's biggest importer of plastic, closed its doors in 2017. And Malaysia, traditionally another major recipient, is now more heavily regulated.

Phil Conran points out that the "UK has an unfortunate history of poor quality plastic waste exports".

Simon Ellin from the Recycling Association says most exports are compliant but admits, "Our industry is blighted by a small minority of illegal operators who take advantage of an under-resourced UK regulatory system and the lack of transparent export systems."

In the first three months of this year Turkey took 49% of all exports - Poland was second and Holland third. But those two countries would have to more than double their imports to make up the difference.

And some UK waste sent to the Netherlands is actually incinerated and an import tax on waste for burning now makes that less appealing.

Other countries in Eastern Europe might also be preparing to receive UK material, but domestic recycling rates there remain low.

"The UK government may try to keep pushing our plastic problem onto other countries in the short-term, but the writing is on the wall for waste exports," says Megan Randles, political campaigner for Greenpeace UK.

The government believes plastic waste can legally and safely be sent abroad for recycling. But a spokesman for the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (Defra) said: "The UK must handle more of its waste at home, and that's why we are committed to banning the export of plastic waste to non-OECD countries and clamping down on illegal waste exports."

The Environment Agency says in the past 18 months it's stopped 160 containers of illegal plastic waste leaving the country.

So if more of our plastic stays in the UK, what's going to happen to it?

The UK's recycling capacity is still only 75% of what was being sent to Turkey. So in the short term, a build-up of waste is likely.

"Excessive stocks can lead ultimately to material being landfilled or abandoned if the expected markets don't materialise."

But there is a third possibility and that's incineration - including in energy-from-waste plants. In this process, energy is recovered in the form of heat or electricity.

More than 40% of household waste in England is currently burned - of that about 8% is made up of plastic.

Simon Ellin from the Recycling Association says its a short-term solution. "Some materials will need to move down the waste hierarchy and be burnt with the energy recovered for electricity generation."

Recycling: Where does it go after it is collected?
Greenpeace's Megan Randles doesn't agree. "We can't dump or burn our way out of our plastics crisis. We need a legally binding reduction in the production of single use plastic"

The Turkey ban could lead to more recycling in the UK. Currently, Defra estimates that 46% of plastic waste is recovered or recycled.

The government is planning a new recycling levy on plastic producers and wants all packaging to be made of at least 30% recycled material by 2022.

The recycling industry is expanding capacity. Construction of what the developer describes as the UK's first plastic-to-hydrogen plant is expected to begin this year in Cheshire, and plans have been unveiled for similar plants across the nation.

Also later this year, one of the biggest waste facilities in the country will become fully operational in Avonmouth near Bristol.

It will burn household waste to fuel a plastics recycling plant, and in its first year it's expected to take 1.6 billion bottles, pots, tubs and trays.

But in the short term there is a fear that what the BBC found in Turkey may simply be duplicated somewhere else. That could be in Eastern Europe, or Africa - or it could be in our own back yards.
nine_inch_nerd
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Powerhouse joins the Active Net Zero Clean Energy Index
2nd Jul 2021

Powerhouse has become an inaugural constituent of the Active Zero Clean Energy Index, designed to champion companies who are striving and making headway in the world’s clean energy transition.

In a joint venture between Longspur Research and Radnor Capital Partners, the index was launched to highlight companies that are actively driving the transition to a net zero carbon world.

Powerhouse sit alongside 145 listed companies spanning a range of sectors and market cap sizes.

Longspur Radnor Indices Limited defines an Active Net Zero company as one which is actively helping others in the transition to a net zero world, not simply achieving net zero themselves.

Active Net Zero companies are the enablers who are delivering clean energy solutions for everyone, not just themselves.

According to the founders there is a “need for a deeper, more stringent, methodological review of the inclusion criteria for the clean energy sector to avoid so-called ‘greenwashing’ which results in Net Zero ‘laggards’ – companies that may have made Net Zero promises, but have yet to deliver material ‘green’ revenues or capex commitments – being included in mainstream, ostensibly ‘clean’ energy indices.”

Powerhouse is proud its technology has been recognised as actively contributing to the world’s clean energy transition and applaud the index for creating a stringent inclusion criteria.
nine_inch_nerd
0
Ik ben toch benieuwd hoe de concurrentie wordt tussen Ways2H en Powerhouse. Beiden hebben vrijwel dezelfde techniek om plastic om te zetten in energie en H2.

Een oud bericht, ja.

40 waste-to-hydrogen refuelling stations planned for the UK
Molly Burgess Jun 22, 2021

Element 2 and Ways2H have joined forces to deliver as many as 40 waste-to-hydrogen refuelling stations in the UK as part of Element 2’s plans to deploy over 800 hydrogen pumps in the UK by 2027, and 2,000 by 2030.

Announcing the new partnership today (June 22), the duo said they plan to collaborate on the production and distribution of renewable hydrogen fuel for public transit and other forms of transportation in the UK, Ireland and Europe.

Under such plans, the companies said they envision as many as 40 sites that will each provide 500kg to one tonne per day of renewable hydrogen fuel – enough for a heavy-duty truck, lorry or other heavy goods vehicles to cover 11,000 road kilometres.

It is believed the first project is planned for a location in Scotland, UK.

Commenting on the planned developments, Tim Harper, CEO of Element 2, said, “Our hydrogen supply agreement with Ways2H is an important step in Element 2’s plan to deliver 2,000 hydrogen refuelling stations across the UK, Ireland and Europe by 2030.

“As we work to procure renewable hydrogen to supply our refuelling stations, we are pleased to be able to include Ways2H and their Circular Economy approach to producing hydrogen from waste as part of the Element 2 network.”

Ways2H recycles municipal solid waste, plastic, sewage sludge and other refuse in a carbon-neutral process that converts the waste into a gas and extracts pure hydrogen that can be used as fuel for fuel-cell vehicles or power generators.

Using the same technology as a recently completed waste-to-hydrogen facility in Tokyo, Ways2H is working to supply multiple waste-to-hydrogen facilities in the UK, Europe, the US and other regions around the world.

On its new collaboration with Element 2, Jean-Louis Kindler, CEO of Wasy2H, said, “Scotland is a world leader in transitioning to clean hydrogen and renewables from fossil fuels to address climate change, and we look forward to working with Element 2 to supply clean hydrogen fuel for cars, trucks, buses, ferries and other transport across Scotland, the UK and Europe.”

Did you miss this exclusive interview with Tim Harper, CEO of Element 2?

When asked about Element 2’s ambitious goal to deploy 800 hydrogen pumps in the UK by 2027, the company’s CEO, Tim Harper, told H2 View he wants to “just get on and do it to break the whole chicken and the egg situation.”

Clearly passionate about the UK’s hydrogen economy, and the country’s journey to net zero, Harper explained that the company’s ambitions all started over a pot of earl grey with his Co-Founder, Brendan Bilton, at the Coniston Hotel in the Yorkshire Dales.

“I have been looking into it [hydrogen] for 20 years, and my Co-Founder Brendan Bilton, he has been involved in hydrogen and fuel cell companies. A couple of years ago we were talking about doing something together in hydrogen, but the question always stood: What shall we do?

“With that in mind, we decided to have a meeting at the Coniston Hotel over a pot of earl grey and figure out exactly what we were going to do. I always like to map things out, and once we started mapping out our plans, we realised that there was a big link missing to connect hydrogen supply and demand in the UK – there was nobody putting the refuelling infrastructure in place.”

Shortly after the business partners’ meeting, the infrastructure idea begun to snowball, and the company now wants to deploy more than 800 hydrogen pumps in the country within the next six years to get the hydrogen mobility ball rolling – a goal that many find extraordinary.
nine_inch_nerd
0
July Newsletter

www.powerhouseenergy.co.uk/newsletter...

7 July 2021

Powerhouse Energy Group plc

("Powerhouse" or the "Company")

Notice of Annual General Meeting

Powerhouse Energy Group plc (AIM: PHE), the UK technology company seeking to commercialise hydrogen production from non-recyclable waste plastic, announces that the Notice of Annual General Meeting (“AGM”) and Form of Proxy have been posted to shareholders. The Company’s AGM will be held at 11.00 a.m. on 29 July 2021 at the offices of Fladgate LLP, 16 Great Queen Street, London WC2B 5DG. A copy of the Notice of AGM can be found on the Company’s website at www.powerhouseenergy.co.uk

The UK Government currently intends to lift restrictions on social gatherings on 19 July 2021 which will mean that Shareholders may attend the AGM if they wish to do so. As the situation and resulting government guidance has the ability to change rapidly, Shareholders should note that changes may need to be put in place at short notice in relation to the AGM. Updates on the status of the AGM and any changes to the proceedings of the meeting will be notified by announcement through a regulatory information service.

-ENDS-
Geweren_Gerrit
0
D'r mag van mij ook wel wat meer spanning in 't aandeel komen. Cielo Waste Solutions doet 't nu toch beter met meer media aandacht: finance.yahoo.com/quote/CWSFF/
nine_inch_nerd
0
quote:

Geweren_Gerrit schreef op 9 juli 2021 14:33:

D'r mag van mij ook wel wat meer spanning in 't aandeel komen. Cielo Waste Solutions doet 't nu toch beter met meer media aandacht: finance.yahoo.com/quote/CWSFF/
Bij Powerhouse is het gewoon wachten op het klaarkomen van de plant in de UK, de voortgang en klaarmaken van de plant in Polen en vervolgens nieuwe locaties in de UK en de EU.

Cielo Waste Solutions? Diesel als product?

nine_inch_nerd
0
Meer.... Ik zou zeggen PR genoeg. Via Peel, via Protos, via Powerhouse.

fuelcellsworks.com/news/consultation-...

Consultation launched on UK first Plastic Park at Peel NRE’s Protos Waste to Hydrogen Site in Cheshire
July 9, 2021
UK first Plastic Park at Peel NREs Protos Waste to Hydrogen Site in Cheshire
Peel NRE, part of Peel L&P, is looking to build a Plastic Park in the North West to process some of the 4.9 million tonnes of plastic waste produced in the UK each year.

The £165m Plastic Park will be located at Protos, the company’s strategic energy and resource hub near Ellesmere Port in Cheshire, and will cluster together innovative processing and treatment technologies to get the most value from plastic waste.

Protos Plastic to Hydrogen Plant

Two facilities at the Plastic Park have already received planning consent – the UK’s first waste plastic to hydrogen facility utilising pioneering Powerhouse Energy technology and a PET (polyethylene terephthalate) recycling plant that will take food and beverage packaging, such as plastic bottles, and recycle them for use in making new packaging products.

Peel NRE is seeking planning approval for a number of further facilities which would provide capacity for up to 367,500 tonnes of mixed recyclables and plastic and save 170,000 tonnes of CO2 every year, while creating over 130 jobs.

A Materials Recycling Facility (MRF): which will separate out dry mixed recyclable materials (such as glass, paper, cans and card) into different waste streams and send them for recycling.
Plastics Recycling Facility One (PRF1): plastic from the MRF and mixed plastics arriving pre-sorted to the site will be separated into different plastic types. The separated plastic will either go to PRF2 or the PET recycling plant already consented at Protos.
Plastics Recycling Facility Two (PRF2): pre-sorted plastic from PRF1 will be washed and processed into flaked plastic which can be used to make new plastic products, such as food packaging or drinks bottles.
Polymer Laminate Recycling Facility: plastic (such as crisp packets and baby food pouches) will be heated, the plastic will break down into an oil for reuse in manufacturing new products with the aluminum recovered for recycling.
Hydrogen refuelling station: taking hydrogen from the consented plastic to hydrogen facility to supply up to 1000kg of hydrogen per day to vehicles, sufficient to fuel approximately 20 HGVs from outside Protos and a similar number of internal HGV movements that will be servicing operations within Protos.
Richard Barker, Development Director at Peel NRE, part of Peel L&P, said: “The Plastic Park is an innovative way of managing our plastic waste. It will be a single location where mixed materials can be sorted and processed, maximising the amount that can be recycled. We’ll be able to take almost all types of plastic, providing a simple solution for local councils. We envision multiple Plastic Parks throughout the country which will help manage waste plastic on our own shores. This will allow us to create a circular economy, starting in the North West.”
Geweren_Gerrit
0
quote:

nine_inch_nerd schreef op 9 juli 2021 15:01:

[...]

Bij Powerhouse is het gewoon wachten op het klaarkomen van de plant in de UK, de voortgang en klaarmaken van de plant in Polen en vervolgens nieuwe locaties in de UK en de EU.

Cielo Waste Solutions? Diesel als product?

Ik vind Cielo voor de korte termijn een prima alternatief voor PH. Het omzetten van afval in een (schone) biodiesel kan al sneller een bijdrage leveren tot het verminderen van de ongewenste uitstoot. Denk bijvoorbeeld aan een schonere kerosine.

Mbt het nieuws: het gaat inderdaad al beter de laatste weken, maar het blijft in mijn mening wel “doormodderen” tot de plants online gaan. We weten nu wel dat ze graag samen werken met Peel..
nine_inch_nerd
0
Goeiemorgen...
'Schone' biodiesel bestaat niet. Plastic gebruiken voor brandstof die evengoed stinkende (onvolledige verbranding bijproduct) gassen produceert én toch weer CO2 geeft, mist bij mij helemaal de plank en geeft geen duurzame bijdrage. Dan kan het evengoed naar een verbrandingsinstallatie om er elektriciteit van te maken...
Daar moeten we nét van af.
Ik begrijp en respecteer je insteek, maar ik blijf bij mijn duurzame mind setting.
nine_inch_nerd
0
Plastic Park live Q&A

Got any questions about our plans for the Plastic Park? There's still time to sign up for our live Q&A tonight where you can put your questions to the team

www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/plastic-park-l...

We are proposing to build a £165m Plastic Park within Protos, on land to the north and south of Grinsome Road. Our project team will be on hand to answer questions about the proposals.

Two facilities at the Plastic Park have already received planning consent:

A waste plastic to hydrogen facility which will take end of life plastic and use it to generate hydrogen for use as a clean fuel in cars, buses and HGVs, helping to improve local air quality.
A Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET) recycling facility which will take food and beverage packaging, such as plastic bottles, and recycle them for use in making new packaging products.
We are proposing to develop:

A Materials Recycling Facility (MRF): which will separate out up to 75,000 tonnes of dry mixed recyclable materials (such as glass, paper, cans and card) into different waste streams and sent for recycling.
Plastics Recycling Facility One (PRF1): plastic from the MRF and mixed plastics arriving pre-sorted to the site will be separated into different plastic types. The separated plastic will either go to PRF2 or the PET recycling plant already consented at Protos. PRF1 will treat up to 200,000 tonnes of plastic.
Plastics Recycling Facility Two (PRF2): up to 90,000 tonnes of pre-sorted plastic from PRF1 which will be washed and processed into flaked plastic which can be used to make new plastic products, such as food packaging or drinks bottles.
Polymer Laminate Recycling Facility: up to 2,500 tonnes of plastic (such as crisp packets and baby food pouches) will be heated, the plastic will break down into an oil for reuse in manufacturing new products with the aluminum recovered for recycling.
Hydrogen refuelling station: taking hydrogen from the consented plastic to hydrogen facility to supply up to 1000kg of hydrogen per day to vehicles, sufficient to fuel approximately 20 HGVs from outside Protos and a similar number of internal HGV movements that will be servicing operations within Protos.
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