NZ Startup Wins $150k in International Environment Challenge
NZ Start-Up Wins $150,000 in International Environmental Challenge
CarbonScape in final three for New York contest - $780,000 prize at stake
Blenheim, September 18, 2012 - Carbon-refining company CarbonScape™ became one of three finalists in the international Postcode Lottery Green Challenge in Amsterdam last night, and has already won at least €100,000 (NZ $156,600) to help the company bring its CO2-reducing business plan to market.
CarbonScape™ directors Nick Gerritsen and Tim Langley will travel to New York for the Postcode Lottery Green Challenge 2012 final on September 23, having already beaten off competition from more than 500 other companies to be selected as a finalist by the jury at the PICNIC Festival 2012 in the Netherlands.
Nick Gerritsen spent several days in Amsterdam this week with the judging panel presenting the CarbonScape business case and answering their questions.
At this year’s final, the first to take place in New York, the jury will announce the winner of the €500,000 (NZ$783,000) grand prize at a special dinner organised by the Dutch Postcode Lottery in conjunction with the Clinton Global Initiative’s annual meeting.
CarbonScape™ has developed patented continuous-flow microwave technology in an energy self-sufficient process to convert wood and other waste into high-value Graphite, Activated Carbon (AC), and Metallurgical Coke. All products are made from renewable feed stocks and in the case of both Graphite and Coke replace fossil fuels. AC is a molecular filter used in diverse applications including water treatment and flue gas scrubbing.
The widespread introduction of CarbonScape’s™ renewable “Green Coke” to replace fossil fuels in the steel industry would significantly impact total global Green House Gas emissions.
“This is a real breakthrough for CarbonScape™. This win will give us huge exposure to potential customers and investors. These awards have a big following internationally and the dinner in New York is very much a top drawer affair,” says CarbonScape™ director Nick Gerritsen.
Gerritsen adds that the company is already attracting serious engagement from international investment fund managers looking to invest in sustainable business.
The other finalists are:
Molly Morse (United States): Mango Materials
Mango
Materials uses bacteria to convert methane into
biodegradable plastic, which can be made into products that
can ultimately undergo recycling in the same microbial
process.
Daan Weddepohl (the Netherlands): Peerby
BV
Through an app and website, Peerby puts consumers
in touch with neighbours who can rent or loan them goods
they need, lessening the need for new products and thus
cutting CO2 emissions.
This major award has been presented to leaders in environmental change and innovation every year since 2007.
In December 2010, CarbonScape™ became the first in the world to pioneer a new green technology - a one-step process to cheaply produce AC. The company has begun small-scale production at its South Island, New Zealand pilot site. It is attracting international interest in its technology, particularly from the global steel industry.
www.carbonscape.com
About the Postcode Lottery Green
Challenge
The Dutch Postcode Lottery has held the
Postcode Lottery Green Challenge every year since 2007 as
part of its efforts to help make the world a greener place.
The Postcode Lottery Green Challenge is one of the world's
largest competitions for sustainable innovation. It is aimed
at creative, innovative thinkers. Environmentally friendly
products and services that reduce CO2 emissions and score
highly on design, user-friendliness and quality are eligible
to compete for the €500,000 prize. Each entrant must
supply a detailed business plan so that an expert
preliminary jury can determine whether his or her idea is
viable. Previous winners have gone on to achieve success
with their innovative inventions, thanks in part to the
publicity and network around the Green Challenge.
Last
year, Nick Christy from Australia won with his
Water Recycling Shower.
In 2010, the American Scot Frank won for his portable,
affordable multipurpose solar collector SolSource.
The
2009 winner was the Englishman Dean Gregory for The Power Collective, a
company that makes nearly invisible rooftop wind
turbines.
In 2008, Eben Bayer of the United States took the
prize for his natural insulation material
Greensulate.
And our first winner, in 2007, was Dutchman
Igor Kluin, for the Qbox, a device that
enables decentralised electricity generation.
For more information, see www.greenchallenge.info.
ENDS