Corda Sustainable Plant on Schedule for Completion and Operation in 2017
Croda International Plc, manufacturer of speciality chemical ingredients that enhance everyday consumer and industrial products, today held a ceremonial groundbreaking on a $170 million capital investment through to 2017 that will solve the age-old dilemma for many companies … performance OR sustainability.
The Need to Choose Is Over
Croda is creating the first North American plant that will lead to 100-percent sustainable non-ionic surfactants, active emulsifying agents that help keep oil and water together, which are used in a range of products from face creams to toothpaste to paint to laundry detergent.
Earlier today, Croda International Plc Group Chief Executive, Steve Foots, and President, Personal Care and Actives, Kevin Gallagher, were joined by Delaware Governor Jack Markell and other officials at Croda’s facility in New Castle, Del., for the ceremonial groundbreaking event. The new plant will be located at the company’s Atlas Point facility in New Castle.
“This investment represents a tidal shift, especially for consumer goods manufacturers who are striving for sustainability and performance,” said Foots. “At Croda, sustainability is fundamental to who we are and what we do, and we’re proud to be launching this first-of-its-kind initiative here in North America.”
The expansion of Atlas Point’s operation will enable Croda to produce non-ionic surfactants from bio-ethanol while maintaining performance standards. By using bio-ethanol, Croda will reduce its use of fossil fuels by moving away from traditional petrochemical derived ingredients, taking yet another step to meet the growing needs of its customers for sustainable options that perform as well as non-sustainable options.
“Once again, Croda is leading the way in finding innovative solutions to meet customer expectations, and we are encouraged by their drive for renewable options,” said Foots. Croda officials are working with local leaders on the permitting details for the project and are encouraged by the collaborative process.
While not a consumer brand itself, Croda’s ingredients are found in many popular consumer products, such as personal care products, textiles, detergents and cleaners.
These new sustainable ingredients will be used in countless ways, including lubricants, seat foams and coatings in the automobile industry; air- and floor-care products in the cleaning industry; and drilling fluid in the oil industry; as well as cosmetics and hair care products in the personal care industry.
Track Record of Sustainability
Croda has a longstanding commitment to investing in sustainability and putting innovation into action. Wherever possible, the company uses renewable raw materials and environmentally sensitive processes to help improve the sustainable credentials of end products.
As one of the company’s 54 operations across 34 countries, Atlas Point experiences this commitment first hand time and again. In 2013, Croda invested $2.3 million in solar panels, which generate 5-percent of the site’s electricity. That’s equivalent to the average power consumed by 130 homes per year. In 2012, Croda invested $8 million in a renewable energy project using landfill gas to generate electricity and steam. The results of this project reduced Croda’s annual CO2 emissions by 11,600 tons. These projects combined generate more than 60 percent of the site’s energy.
Earlier in 2012, Atlas Point achieved a 78-percent reduction in landfill waste by increasing the use of solid waste as fuel and increasing recycling opportunities.
Local Benefits
Croda’s Atlas Point facility has been a longstanding, positive corporate citizen and active member of its community. Croda will bring more than 250 construction jobs to Delaware to build this new section of the Atlas Point facility. In addition, Croda will create approximately 30 new, full-time manufacturing positions at the site.
“I applaud Croda’s continued investment in Delaware, both environmentally and economically,” said Delaware Governor Jack Markell. “Croda has made substantial investments in upgrading and enhancing the facility to benefit the local community and the environment, and we’re proud to have such a forward-thinking, positive company in our state.”
Once the permitting process is complete, Croda will build the new plant over the next two years; it is projected to begin operations in 2017. Throughout construction, Atlas Point will continue as one of Croda’s main manufacturing sites for non-ionic surfactants.
“Croda’s plan to develop additional infrastructure in New Castle is welcome news,” said U.S. Sen. Tom Carper. “Not only will this provide permanent jobs, but it will add to the sustainability initiatives the company has already invested here in Delaware, such as the solar power installation and electricity from landfill gas.”
Development Partners
Croda has partnered with Scientific Design Company Inc., a leading licensor of chemical process technologies worldwide, to design the new plant.
Walbridge Process Engineering and Construction will serve as the project’s construction manager; Walbridge is one of Engineering News-Record’s “Top 50” U.S. construction companies in the country.
Middough Inc., which provides a full-range of engineering, architecture and management services as well as traditional and specialized design, technical and management services worldwide, will complete the detailed engineering and equipment specification.
About Croda
Croda is a specialty chemical manufacturer who, through the imaginative and practical use of science, creates ingredients and technologies that improve people’s lives by enhancing everyday products. They are the name behind the high-performance ingredients in some of the biggest, most successful brands in the world, creating products that are relied on by industries and consumers worldwide.
Croda has 3,500+ employees work across 18 manufacturing sites and in offices in over 34 countries. In the wide ranging business sectors that they serve, its focus is on developing and delivering innovative ingredients for; Personal Care; Crop Care; Home Care; Health Care; Geo Technologies; Industrial Chemicals; Polymer Additives; Coatings and Polymers and Lubricants.
See also: www.FrackCheckWV.net
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This article is quite interesting.
The most recent Science had an article about research to build wood skyscrapers.
Special lamination and fireproofing is allowing construction of an 18 story wood skyscraper at a University in British Columbia. Larger ones are in the planning stage.
Wood has less energy required in production and fabrication, and sequesters carbon. Not all buildings could be constructed that way, however, because forests can’t supply enough raw material.
Work underway on Croda bio-ethanol plant
By Scott Goss, Wilmington News Journal, February 2, 2016
An international specialty chemical manufacturer recently marked a milestone in the construction of a $170 million upgrade at its plant near New Castle.
British-based Croda Inc. last week announced completion of the steel frame that will house the main processor reactor for the bio-ethanol plant being built at its Atlas Point facility near the Delaware Memorial Bridge.
The new plant, reportedly the first of its kind in North America, will convert corn-based ethanol, or alcohol, into ethylene oxide.
The chemical then will be used to make Croda products, such as emulsifying agents that bind oil and water to make face creams, toothpastes, paints and laundry detergents.
The bio-ethanol plant, slated to come online in 2017, also will eliminate the need for long-distance rail shipments of hazardous ethylene oxide from Texas, according to company officials.
The project is expected to create more than 250 construction jobs and up to 30 new, full-time manufacturing positions, while protecting nearly 50 existing jobs at the Atlas Point facility that could have been transferred elsewhere. The site currently employs about 125.
The Delaware Economic Development Office last spring approved nearly $2.5 million in grants to help support the project.
“We’re very proud of this milestone and all the great things it represents for our customers, Croda and the state of Delaware,” Bob Stewart, the company’s managing director of operations for North America, said in a release.
Croda has made a long-term push to make its products “sustainable” and environmentally sound. About 70 percent of Croda’s raw materials currently come from renewable sources, according to company officials.
In 2012, the company broke ground on an $8 million project at Atlas Point that is engineered to produce electricity from landfill gas piped from the nearby Cherry Island Landfill. Other sustainability initiatives launched at the facility have included a $2.3 million solar power installation that produces about 5 percent of the site’s electricity.
Source: http://www.delawareonline.com/story/money/business/delawareinc/2016/02/01/work-underway-croda-bio-ethanol-plant/79645020/
See also: http://www.FrackCheckWV.net