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Genoil Inc GNOLF

Genoil Inc. is technology-based company engaged in the development of technologies relating to the oil and gas industry. The Company specializes in heavy-to-light oil technology, oil field development and exploration and production. It is a provider of hydro conversion fixed-bed technology for the upstream and downstream oil and gas industry. It is also working with Chinese policy banks and Chinese companies to provide, project financing, drilling, production, and processing services to the oil and gas industry. Its technology consists of Genoil Hydroconversion Upgrader (GHU), which converts sour (high sulfur), heavy hydrocarbon feed stocks into lighter oil with higher quality distillates for conventional refining. The Company is also engaged in other technologies, such as oil upgrading and recycling, water purification port technologies, well testing, and sand cleaning. The Company markets its technology to customers in the Middle East, Russia and China.


OTCPK:GNOLF - Post by User

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Comment by peterap2001on Aug 30, 2017 8:03pm
354 Views
Post# 26639947

RE:RE:RE:RE:Article - Sulfur Cap

RE:RE:RE:RE:Article - Sulfur Caphttps://trueviralnews.com/one-of-the-worlds-most-polluting-industries-has-two-years-to-clean-up-and-its-woefully-unprepared/ One of the worlds most polluting industries has two years to clean up-and its woefully unprepared The shipping industry, which ferries everything from food to gadgets around the globe, may be out of most peoples sight, but it is one of the worlds biggest polluters. It only produces 3% of carbon-dioxide emissions, but it produces 15% of sulfur, 13% of nitrogen, and 11% of particulate emissions. After much stalling, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), which regulates international shipping, has begun to address the shipping industrys worldwide pollution problem. Starting in 2020, it has ruled that the sulfur content of shipping fuel must go down from 3.5% of fuel weight to 0.5%. The numbers might seem small, but a new report from IHS Markit, a provider of market and financial data, suggests that both shipping companies and refineries are likely to face difficulties meeting the regulation. The two industries are vastly unprepared, Sandeep Sayal of IHS Markit told Hellenic Shipping News. Neither has made the necessary investments for compliance, which means that the 2020 implementation date will result in a scramble. To follow the regulations, ships will need cleaner fuels, such as marine gas oil, which are more expensive, or theyll need to install equipment to clean up the dirtier fuels, such as heavy fuel oil, that they use right now. Based on oil prices in August, marine gas oil costs 1.5 times as much as heavy fuel oil. Fuel accounts for as much as half of the operating costs for the shipping industry, according to David Lifschultz, CEO of Genoil, a company that upgrades heavy oil. He echoed the conclusion of the IHS Markit report, saying that the shipping industry is procrastinating on the problem of cleaning up its fuel. If the shipping industry makes a last-minute dash to use gas oil instead of fuel oil, itll make gas oil prices spike. The economically smarter way out, Lifschultz argues, is to invest in equipment that can clean up fuel oil.Genoil offers such equipment, which can cost between $30 million and $70 million, depending on what other equipment is available to support the process of removing sulfur from fuel oil. The process involves heating fuel oil to 700C and reacting it with hydrogen in the presence of metal catalysts to aid the conversion. Much of the sulfur and nitrogen from the fuel is removed this way, and can be caught in scrubbers installed on the equipment, stopping it from entering the atmosphere. The process would produce its own carbon dioxide emissions, because it will burn some fuel for heat, but the reduction in total emissions from cleaner fuel would be greater. The shipping industry is under pressure to find the cheapest possible way to comply with the new regulations, especially as its going through a rough patch. In February, for instance, South Koreas Hanjin Shipping declared bankruptcy, and many other shipping companies have reported losses in 2016 and first half of 2017. The problem was overcapacity, as companies kept building bigger and bigger ships while demand didnt increase at the same pace. If fuel costs, which have been quite low in the last few years, start to pile up, it could spell much bigger problem for the industry. Still, even if the shipping industry reduces its emissions, there are other environmental problems it creates. Ship scrapping is a highly polluting exercise: asbestos, heavy metals, and oils are toxic. Most scrapping now happens in India, Pakistan, and Bangladesh where environmental controls are lax and thus costs are lower.
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