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Green Power, Inc., of Issaquah, Wash. claims technology turns trash into diesel fuel. Plans plant in Montana

Green Power, Inc. http://www.cleanenergyprojects.com , a company in Issaquah, Wash., claims it has developed a technology capable of turning everyday landfill waste into diesel fuel, in a process it calls catalytic depolymerization.

“We really can convert regular household waste, medical waste, anything that is not radioactive, metal, glass or porcelain, into diesel fuel,” said Michael Spitzauer, CEO of Green Power, in a statement issued Aug. 2. A demonstration in Fife, Wash., on July 26 was covered by The Seattle Times, which reported online Aug. 1 that Spitzauer spoke confidently about how he and his company “were out to reshape the world.”

The company expects to open the first plant using the technology next year on tribal land in Fife, a suburb of Tacoma, Wash., with a second to open in Montana soon after, Spitzauer said, according to The Times. Within a decade, 1,500 plants are to open across the country, all simultaneously solving the solid-waste and imported-oil problems, the entrepreneur said, according to The Times.

Full Story: http://www.npnweb.com/uploads/featurearticles/2006/npnMarketPulse/083006_mp1.asp

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