Hexion, the chemical company, has started using bio-based methanol in the production of formaldehyde. The bio-based fuel which can be made from feedstock mixes and technologies will ultimately help the company make more sustainable materials with lower emissions.
The formaldehyde will then use bio-benzene to produce methylene diphenyl diisocyanate (MDI), which will have more sustainable features compared with those produced with fossil fuel-based methanol.
Using renewable methanol cuts carbon dioxide emissions by up to 95%, reduces nitrogen oxide emissions by up to 80%, and eliminates sulfur oxide and particulate matter emissions, according to the Methanol Institute.
The company says it will use the bio-based methanol in the formaldehyde production at its Baytown, Texas, manufacturing facility.
Hexion says the effort is part of its plan to reduce its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 20% through 2030.
Recent Posts
Ammonia
Azane Unveils New Subsidiary to Drive Ammonia Bunkering Development Oslo, Norway
Fuels Heavy oils
Public sector carbon emissions fall to 3.7 mn tonnes in Singapore
Fuels Heavy oils
UltraTech Cement targets to achieve 85% green energy
Fuels LNG
JCB unveils hydrogen combustion technology