Kore Infrastructure completes successful waste-to-energy demonstration
Kore Infrastructure demonstrates its waste-to-energy modular system's success one year after implementation. Kore Infrastructure has announced the successful one-year demonstration of its waste-to-energy modular system in Los Angeles, California. The company's technology can produce 100% renewable energy from organic waste using a closed loop, carbon-negative process. This demonstration proves that Kore's technology can provide a sustainable and environmentally friendly alternative to landfills. In addition, the UltraGreen hydrogen produced by Kore can be used to decarbonize a variety of ind…
Kore Infrastructure demonstrates its waste-to-energy modular system's success one year after implementation.
Kore Infrastructure has announced the successful one-year demonstration of its waste-to-energy modular system in Los Angeles, California. The company's technology can produce 100% renewable energy from organic waste using a closed loop, carbon-negative process. This demonstration proves that Kore's technology can provide a sustainable and environmentally friendly alternative to landfills. In addition, the UltraGreen hydrogen produced by Kore can be used to decarbonize a variety of industrial applications including steel manufacturing and ammonia production. The UltraGreen hydrogen can also be used for fuel cell cars, trucks, buses, and trains. This innovative technology is designed to...
• Produce 100% renewable energy from organic waste
• Reduce air pollution
• Reduce dependence on fossil fuels
• Modular system can expand production capacity by 50%
• Sequester atmospheric CO2 for centuries
• Combat global warming
• Improve plant growth and soil health
Kore Infrastructure has developed technology that can create a sustainable, carbon-negative energy supply chain.
Kore Infrastructure's waste-to-energy modular system can produce 100% renewable energy from organic waste using a closed loop, carbon-negative process. The process begins by heating the organic waste under high temperatures in a zero-oxygen environment, a pyrolysis process that converts the waste into fuel. The fuel is then used to generate electricity and heat, offsetting the need for traditional fuels like coal or natural gas. Additionally, the system sequesters atmospheric CO2 for centuries, helping to combat global warming. "This demonstrates that Kore’s technology is commercially-ready and able to scale up to solve the twin problems of reducing waste and increasing access to clean, carbon-negative fuels,” said Cornelius Shields, CEO and founder of Kore Infrastructure. "Our technology is now available to waste, energy, and transportation sector leaders to provide a Made-in-America, carbon-negative energy solution, creating a supply chain that is emissions-free, sustainable, and affordable."