Emvolon, an MIT spin-off that converts greenhouse gas emissions into carbon-negative fuels and chemicals, announced an agreement with Montauk Renewables, Inc., a renewable energy company specializing in the management, recovery and conversion of biogas from waste into renewable natural gas. Leveraging Emvolon鈥檚 patented technology, the initial pilot is a commercial-scale demonstration of recovering and converting biogas into green methanol, which is expected to take place at Montauk鈥檚 renewable gas production site at a landfill in Humble, Texas.
By repurposing car engines as cost-effective, modular chemical plants, Emvolon has designed a technology platform that converts the methane in biogas onsite into ready-to-use, easy-to-transport liquid green chemicals and fuels, such as green methanol and ammonia. The carbon-negative chemicals and fuels can then be transported in standard truck containers to be used in hard to abate emissions sectors like maritime and aviation. This system offers a way for Montauk to monetize otherwise flared tail gas resources at low cost and without expensive pipeline infrastructure, while also eliminating the greenhouse gas emissions these incinerated resources would otherwise generate.
鈥淎fter successfully showcasing our technology at our 5,000 square-foot testing and development facility here in Massachusetts, we鈥檙e now focused on commercially scaling the production of green methanol,鈥 said Dr. Emmanuel Kasseris, CEO of Emvolon. 鈥淲e鈥檙e thrilled to kick off this pilot with Montauk, a leader in renewable energy development that鈥檚 paving the way for other major corporations to turn biogas from landfills into valuable carbon-negative fuels and chemicals. Our technology doesn鈥檛 rely on oil pipelines, thereby eliminating scale-up risk, reducing deployment costs by millions, and cutting implementation timelines to just months. As a result, we鈥檙e helping transform emissions-producing, wasted resources into valuable, revenue-generating opportunities.鈥
The pilot is designed to produce up to 15,300 gallons of green methanol per year and may eventually lead to a full-scale, commercial system capable of producing up to 2,400,000 gallons of methanol annually at the same or similar sites. Sean McClain, CEO of Montauk, commented, 鈥淔or more than three decades, we鈥檝e specialized in the recovery and processing of biogas from landfills and other non-fossil fuel sources. Working with Emvolon, we鈥檙e excited to leverage our expertise as one of the largest U.S. producers of renewable natural gas and, together, continue to enhance the suite of beneficial use products sourced from biogas, and the economic vitality of these environmental stewardship projects.鈥