Air Products to leave waste-to-energy business
An inability to resolve operation and design issues has lead to the company shutting down its W2E business. Air Products & Chemicals Inc. has announced that it will be closing down its struggling waste-to-energy (W2E) operation after it failed to efficiently resolve operational and design challenges, reported The Wall Street Journal. The initial promise was for the company’s planned renewable energy plants to power over 100,000 UK homes. In addition to powering thousands of homes in England, the two energy from waste plants that had been planned by Air Products were also supposed to reduce la…
An inability to resolve operation and design issues has lead to the company shutting down its W2E business.
Air Products & Chemicals Inc. has announced that it will be closing down its struggling waste-to-energy (W2E) operation after it failed to efficiently resolve operational and design challenges, reported The Wall Street Journal.The initial promise was for the company’s planned renewable energy plants to power over 100,000 UK homes.
In addition to powering thousands of homes in England, the two energy from waste plants that had been planned by Air Products were also supposed to reduce landfill waste and generate high-tech green jobs in the area. The plants were announced for Tees Valley, United Kingdom back in 2012. Seifi Ghasemi, Air Products CEO, said that that company had “pushed hard” to make the technology work but they were disappointed with the result. The technology for the project involved advanced plasma gasification. This is a type of tech that involves the use of extremely high temperatures to convert waste into a fuel gas known as syngas.
The final deciding factor that lead to exiting the waste-to-energy business occurred in the second quarter when a review showed that “significant” costs and time would be needed to resolve design and operational issues.