Skip to main content

Neste, Alterra and Technip Energies collaborate to offer standardised solution to build chemical recycling plants

Published by , Assistant Editor
Hydrocarbon Engineering,


Neste, Alterra and Technip Energies have signed a collaboration agreement to advance the circularity of plastics by providing the industry a standardised technology solution for chemical recycling, also known as 'advanced recycling'.

The partners aim to globally offer a standardised modular solution, based on Alterra’s proprietary liquefaction technology, to parties interested in building capacity for chemical recycling. This solution will come in the form of readily designed and engineered liquefaction plant modules, which will allow for lower pre-investment costs, accelerated implementation time, high predictability on project economics and reduced overall capital costs. Contributing to more effective execution of chemical recycling capacity projects, the solution helps the industry to reduce dependency on virgin fossil resources and accelerate the circularity of polymers and chemicals.

Alterra’s technology is a thermochemical liquefaction process, which converts hard-to-recycle plastics into a liquid hydrocarbon product. This liquid intermediate product can then be further refined into high-quality raw materials for new plastics and chemicals. As of today, Neste alone has processed more than 6000 t of plastic-derived feeds, including ISCC PLUS certified oil from Alterra’s industrial-scale site in Akron, Ohio, US.

Alterra and Neste started collaborating in chemical recycling in 2021, jointly improving aspects of Alterra’s technology and creating respective value chains. Alterra and Technip Energies started their collaboration in chemical recycling in 2022. The three companies now join efforts in a unique endeavour: Alterra and Neste will licence the liquefaction technology and Technip Energies will design, engineer and deliver the standardised liquefaction plant solution to interested parties globally.

“We have a proven technology for liquefaction that encompasses 15 years of research, development and improvement,” said Frederic Schmuck, CEO at Alterra Energy. “Now we are reducing the hurdles for companies interested in investing in liquefaction. We are ultimately enabling a copy-paste solution for liquefaction plants, allowing for a fast scale-up of economically viable recycling capacities globally.”

“There is strong demand for more sustainable solutions, and we are ready to serve this demand,” said Andreas Teir, who is in charge of chemical recycling at Neste. “We have already established our role in processing circular feedstocks into high-quality raw materials for the petrochemicals industry, and our ambition is to grow these processed volumes over the upcoming months and years. We are therefore looking forward to offering a robust and easy-to-deploy liquefaction technology to also contribute to meeting our own increasing demand for liquefied waste plastic.”

“We have seen a recent trend in the circularity market wanting lower pre-investment costs and proven, in-use technology, while allowing adopters to maintain their 2030 climate commitments,” said Bhaskar Patel, SVP Sustainable Fuels, Chemicals and Circularity at Technip Energies. “We look forward to supporting the market with Alterra’s proven technology, improved with Neste, and our standard modular solution, both seen as key enablers for scalable projects. We are confident that this solution, along with Neste’s brand power and expected increasing demand for liquefied waste plastic, will contribute to fast deployment of new chemical recycling capacity.”

Read the article online at: https://www.hydrocarbonengineering.com/petrochemicals/05112024/neste-alterra-and-technip-energies-collaborate-to-offer-standardised-solution-to-build-chemical-recycling-plants/

You might also like

The Hydrocarbon Engineering Podcast - Education and training for every phase of the insulating system design process

In this episode of the Hydrocarbon Engineering Podcast, Brandon Stambaugh, Owens Corning Director for Technical Services, joins us to discuss engineers’ demand for education and training to support the critical phases that affect the performance and longevity of insulating systems.

Tune in to the Hydrocarbon Engineering Podcast on your favourite podcast app today.

Apple Podcasts  Spotify Podcasts  YouTube

 
 

Embed article link: (copy the HTML code below):


 

This article has been tagged under the following:

Downstream news Downstream petrochemical news Downstream contract news