August 27, 2021 -- InvestorsHub NewsWire -- via The
Market Highlights
Clean Vision Corp. U.S. OTC: (CLNV)
CLNV – Clean
Vision’s Clean-Seas Files Patent for Its Global Plastic Conversion
Network
The world’s oceans are literally drowning with plastic
waste.
Landfills are reaching capacity.
Did you know over 100 million marine animals die each year from
plastic waste alone?
Even more frightening, plastics take 500-1000 years to degrade;
currently 79% is sent to landfills or the ocean, while only 9% is
recycled, and 12% gets incinerated.
We’ve reached the tipping point…and there’s no time to
wait
That’s why Governments worldwide are desperately searching for a
sustainable solution that benefits people, profit and the planet –
the stakes cannot be higher.
Fortunately, a company like Clean Vision Corp. U.S.
OTC: (CLNV) exists
to solve these problems.
Just Who is Clean Vision Corp. U.S. OTC: (CLNV)?
Clean Vision Corp is a mergers and acquisitions (M&A)
organization that identifies leading companies and technologies
focused on clean technology solutions, sustainability, and
renewable energy. Specifically, Clean Vision zeroes in on companies
that will serve the global market’s needs today and in the future.
This is supported by consultancy services, connecting organizations
to new verticals, and accelerating a company’s time to market.
At the moment, the company supports two subsidiaries,
including:
- Clean-Seas – a solutions provider developing plastic recycling
technologies and reducing the amount of waste that flows into the
world’s oceans.
- 100Bio—which develops and manufactures biodegradable Styrofoam
for food services and all types of disposable packaging.
This Ingenious Heating Process BREAKS DOWN PLASTIC – At
the Cellular Level
Clean-Seas works with community stakeholders from government,
business, and non-governmental organizations. All to identify
plastic waste stream challenges and designing, funding, and
implementing innovative technology solutions, such as pyrolysis and
gasification.
According to McKinsey and Company:
“Pyrolysis is an invaluable technology to treat mixed polymer
streams, which mechanical recycling technologies cannot
handle.”
“If plastics demand follows its current trajectory, global
plastics-waste volumes would grow from 260 million tons per year in
2016 to 460 million tons per year by 2030, taking what is already a
serious environmental problem to a whole new level. In the face of
public outcry about global plastics pollution, the chemical
industry is starting to mobilize on this issue. We also believe
there are opportunities to build a new and profitable branch of the
industry based on recycled plastics, which our research suggests
could represent a profit pool of as much as $55 billion a year
worldwide by 2030.”
In fact, it may be one of the most advanced recycling solutions
in the world today. Here’s why:
- Pyrolysis is a thermochemical treatment. It can be applied to
any organic (carbon-based) product. In this treatment, the material
is exposed to high temperatures. Then, in the absence of oxygen, it
goes through a chemical and physical separation into different
molecules.
- Plastic pyrolysis is a chemical reaction. This reaction
involves the molecular breakdown of large groups of molecules into
smaller groups in the presence of heat. Pyrolysis is also known as
thermal cracking. The resulting outputs of “cracking” plastic are
pyrolysis oil, syngas, and char.
- These products can be used to power generators for energy
production, refined into marine and road quality diesel fuels, and
activated carbon for water purification.
Plastic to Green Energy Is About to Revolutionize
Africa
The subsidiary, Clean-Seas just signed an LOI to build and
operate a waste plastic-to-energy pyrolysis plant in Kinshasa in
the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) with a $30 million CAPEX
price.
Kinshasa is the capital and the largest city of the DRC, with a
2021 population of 15 million. The DRC Ministry of the
Environment estimates that more than 9,000 tons of municipal solid
waste (MSW) are collected and disposed of daily. This waste is
incinerated or dumped in landfills that are rapidly reaching
capacity.
According to Dan Bates, Clean Vision Chief Executive
Officer:
“Africa has always been one of our targets, and it is now the
fourth continent upon which we have an opportunity to introduce our
services. The potential for this technology is limitless, a
continent with an ample supply of feedstock and a dramatic need for
clean, environmentally friendly power. We believe that once leaders
of other African nations read about our MSW conversion facility
being built, which pays for itself in three years, and solves the
waste plastic and landfill problems while providing clean energy –
our opportunity is practically unlimited.”
“Just as in the west and all over the world,” Mr. Bates added,
“Africa’s youthful population is especially sensitive to the
ecological impact of waste plastic which makes the Continent a
highly fertile business environment for our clean tech.”
Cape Cod, MA Joins the Fight Against Plastic
Waste.
Clean-Seas also just joined the Cape Cod Chamber of
Commerce. That’s because it’s aggressively pursuing its
previously announced proposal to finance and build a
commercial-scale waste plastic-to-energy pyrolysis plant.
The Chamber founded the Blue Economy Project, recognizing the
value of Cape Cod’s water-based economy (tourism, commercial and
recreational fishing, aquaculture, and recreation). This project
focuses explicitly on the challenges and opportunities presented by
the region’s special relationship with the ocean and its limited
freshwater supply.
Through its Sustainable Economic Development Pillar (SEDP
committee), the Chamber supports a balanced, stable, and reliable
energy portfolio. Most importantly, it supports an energy portfolio
that is cost-competitive, environmentally responsible, and
supportive of the coastal regions’ resiliency.
Massachusetts generates more than 600,000 tons of plastic/year,
according to its Department of Environmental Protection. It’s
estimated that the Cape alone generates more than 40,000 tons of
waste plastic/year, excluding deposit bottles and plastics that
enjoy a strong if incomplete recycling market.
Clean-Seas estimates that this amount of plastic could be
converted to over 5 million gallons of ultra-low-sulfur diesel,
with a value of over $10 million annually. Clean-Seas also
believes that this could offset 440,000 barrels of crude oil
exploration, transportation, and production.
Introducing the World’s First Biodegradable Styrofoam!
At the moment, Americans are throwing away about 25 billion
Styrofoam cups a year. All of which are filling global landfills
and oceans.
Read
More
Source - https://themarkethighlights.com/remove-nearly-eight-million-tons-of-plastic/
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