"The key to look for is those companies despite be
Post# of 43064
I've seen a lot of these pyrolysis companies. They pop up and invariably die. I suspect even the touted Agilyx will end up the same way. Years ago the US Dept of Energy's website had a piece on pyrolysis saying several pyrolysis companies reached "near commercial" status in the 1990's. Translating "near commercial" means "not quite profitable." That seems to still be the case today.
If you invest in this space, there's a good chance you're going to lose money. The best way you can protect yourself is to have them provide some evidence of value before you invest...and be careful because a number of them employ artifices to make it look like there's proof.
One example I heard was with Mr. Rivera of USSE. Apparently he was caught by a prospective customer burying pipes to his pyrolysis "reactor". Apparently a quick thinker, Mr. Rivera said he was doing that as a "mock up" to show what it would look like if running.
Even with JBI, Mr. Bordynuik passed out fuel straight from the processor and one person found it did run his lawnmower. Through those actions the communication from Mr. Bordynuik was that free waste plastic was converted a gasoline engine-ready fuel. Oddly (or not oddly) enough Mr. Bordynuik doesn't seem to be able to replicate that success.
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