 
                                EPA Honors Winners of the 20th Annual Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Awards
WASHINGTON, D.C. – August 12, 2015 – The  U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) is recognizing landmark green  chemistry technologies developed by industrial pioneers and leading  scientists that turn climate risk and other environmental problems into  business opportunities, spurring innovation and economic development. 
  
“From academia to business, we congratulate those who bring innovative  solutions that will help solve some of the most critical environmental  problems,” said Jim Jones, EPA’s Assistant Administrator for Chemical  Safety and Pollution Prevention. “These innovations reduce the use of  energy, hazardous chemicals and water, while cutting manufacturing costs  and sparking investments. In some cases they turn pollution into useful  products. Ultimately, these manufacturing processes and products are  safer for people’s health and the environment. We will continue to work  with the 2015 winners as their technologies are adopted in the  marketplace.”
The Presidential Green Chemistry Challenge Award winners be honored at a  ceremony in Washington, DC. The winners and their innovative  technologies are:
Algenol in Fort Myers, Florida, is being recognized  for developing a blue-green algae to produce ethanol and other fuels.  The algae uses CO2  from air or industrial emitters with sunlight and saltwater to create  fuel while dramatically reducing the carbon footprint, costs and water  usage, with no reliance on food crops as feedstocks. This is a win-win  for the company, the public, and the environment. It has the potential  to revolutionize this industry and reduce the carbon footprint of fuel  production. 
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Hybrid Coating Technologies/Nanotech Industries of  Daly City, California, is being recognized for developing a safer,  plant-based polyurethane for use on floors, furniture and in foam  insulation. The technology eliminates the use of isocyanates, which  contribute to workplace asthma. This is already in production, is  reducing VOC’s and costs, and is safer for people and the environment. 
LanzaTech in Skokie, Illinois, is  being recognized for the development of a process that uses waste gas  to produce fuels and chemicals, reducing companies’ carbon footprint.  LanzaTech has partnered with Global Fortune 500 Companies and others to  use this technology, including facilities that can each produce 100,000  gallons per year of ethanol, and a number of chemical ingredients for  the manufacture of plastics. This technology is already a proven winner  and has enormous potential for American industry.
SOLTEX (Synthetic Oils and Lubricants of Texas) in  Houston, Texas, is being recognized for developing a new chemical  reaction process that eliminates the use of water and reduces hazardous  chemicals in the production of additives for lubricants and gasoline. If  widely used, this technology has the potential to eliminate millions of  gallons of wastewater per year and reduce the use of a hazardous  chemical by 50 percent. 
Renmatix in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, is being  recognized for developing a process using supercritical water to more  cost effectively break down plant material into sugars used as building  blocks for renewable chemicals and fuels. This innovative low-cost  process could result in a sizeable increase in the production of  plant-based chemicals and fuels, and reduce the dependence on petroleum  fuels.
Professor Eugene Chen of Colorado State University is  being recognized for developing a process that uses plant-based  materials in the production of renewable chemicals and liquid fuels.   This new technology is waste-free and metal-free. It offers significant  potential for the production of renewable chemicals, fuels, and  bioplastics that can be used in a wide range of safer industrial and  consumer products.
  
During the 20 years of the program, EPA has received  more than 1500 nominations and presented awards to 104 technologies.  Winning technologies are responsible for annually reducing the use or  generation of more than 826 million pounds of hazardous chemicals,  saving 21 billion gallons of water, and eliminating 7.8 billion pounds  of carbon dioxide equivalent releases to air. 
  
  An independent panel of technical experts convened by  the American Chemical Society Green Chemistry Institute formally judged  the 2015 submissions from among scores of nominated technologies and  made recommendations to EPA for the 2015 winners. The 2015 awards event  will be held in conjunction with the 2015 Green Chemistry and  Engineering Conference.
  
  For more information on this year’s winners and those from the last two decades, visit http://www2.epa.gov/green-chemistry
 
                         
							 
							 
							 
							 
							 
							 
					 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									