Renewable Energy Evolved
Renewable energy from waste such as plastics, tires, forest debris, agricultural waste and other organic material, is quickly gaining recognition as a viable addition to many renewable portfolio standards (RPS) across the world. Envira helps customers and communities harness the potential of waste energy by building power and cogeneration facilities that cleanly repurpose waste and generate usable products by means of specialized processes.
The process of converting energy by gasifying organic material has been around for more than 180 years. During much of that time, coal and peat were the primary fuels used to power gasification plants. Initially in the US, gasification technology was used to produce gas from coal or coke for municipal lighting and cooking. By 1850, the major cities of the world had "gaslight." About 1880, the internal combustion engine was invented and “Producer Gas” was used to make electricity. Eventually, natural gas pipelines displaced the municipal plants. Gasification became popular again during the world wars, especially World War II when gasoline became scarce. Wood gas generators helped to power about a million vehicles world-wide in 1945.
Tires, MSW, Plastics cluttering our landfills will become a thing of the past by converting trash into useful products, at the same time, saving the planet. Envira is offering a patented and commercially tested system that was developed and tested by the DOE, utilizing a new iteration of gasification technology that will revolutionize regeneration of all carbon based waste. Envira is changing the waste to energy landscape, one pile at a time.
Air Quality
Flexible Feed Stock
Efficiency
“Pollution is just molecules in the wrong place. ”— Barry Commoner
“Creativity is just connecting things. When you ask creative people how they did something, they feel a little guilty because they didn’t really do it, they just saw something. It seemed obvious to them after a while. ”— Steve Jobs
“Pollution is just molecules in the wrong place. ”— Barry Commoner