New York, NY: New ideas for natural gas
March 11, 2009 Leave a Comment
| March 13, 2009 | ||
| 8:00 am | to | 10:00 am |
This month’s CEEP (Center for Economic and Environmental Partnership, Inc.) breakfast features LPP Inc., a company that transforms various fuels to natural gas. The breakfast includes information on the company as well as an overview from an industry expert. Hosted monthly by Dickstein Shapiro LLP, the breakfasts provide industry information as well as an opportunity to meet those looking for investing opportunities in sustainable technologies.
ABOUT LPP, Inc.
Current technology for burning liquid fuels results in high pollution levels compared to natural gas; hence natural gas has become the “clean” fuel of choice. LPP’s Technology solution enables the clean combustion of liquid fuels with the same criteria pollutant emission levels as natural gas, thus providing a clean alternative for power generators that can burn multiple fuels. The LPP solution offers the power generation industry a high, immediate return on investment in the course of normal operations by:
- reducing criteria pollutant emissions of NOX, CO, SOX, and particulate (soot) from liquid fuel combustion to levels comparable to those of natural gas.
- providing the cleanest use of renewable fuels by producing clean “green” power with no net CO2 emissions.
- providing opportunities for generation of renewable energy credits and carbon credits.
- improving the heat rate for gas turbine plants currently burning liquid fuels.
- enabling low value or lower cost liquid hydrocarbon streams, such as naphtha, to be used as fuel for clean power generation.
- enabling fuel utilization flexibility for gas turbine operation, which provides operators with significant arbitrage opportunities as fuel prices fluctuate.
LPP has been granted two U.S. Patents, filed additional patents, received international patents in several countries and has additional patents pending in more than 35 others. Their fuel based technology is also applicable to liquid fuel combustion devices other than gas turbines such as reciprocating engines, process, boiler and duct burners. The first commercial LPP Combustion System is being designed, engineered and built for delivery in the first half of 2009.
For more information contact:
Gelvin Stevenson, Ph.D.
Program Director
Center for Economic and Environmental Partnership, Inc.
718-863-4156
917-599-6089
To register, click here.
