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Join us for our conversation with Kathleen O'Neil, a founder and CEO of two innovative clean tech companies. One company focuses on Carbon Capture and the second one, incorporated in Canada, is developing a new and innovative Methane heating and cracking (pyrolysis) technology to separate the Hydrogen and Carbon components from Natural Gas in a way where no CO2 is produced. This low energy technology turns methane into Hydrogen and Carbon Black (a solid form of Carbon that can be used in other industrial processes).
She has been at work developing this technology since 2016, and with over $9M in industry and government funding New Wave Hydrogen is conducting field pilots and looking to move toward commercial pilot scales by 2025. This technology will open the door for distributed and centralized Hydrogen production with low energy requirements and with zero carbon dioxide, offering the potential for significant reductions in GHG emissions in Western Canada and globally.
By Nicolas LeBlancJoin us for our conversation with Kathleen O'Neil, a founder and CEO of two innovative clean tech companies. One company focuses on Carbon Capture and the second one, incorporated in Canada, is developing a new and innovative Methane heating and cracking (pyrolysis) technology to separate the Hydrogen and Carbon components from Natural Gas in a way where no CO2 is produced. This low energy technology turns methane into Hydrogen and Carbon Black (a solid form of Carbon that can be used in other industrial processes).
She has been at work developing this technology since 2016, and with over $9M in industry and government funding New Wave Hydrogen is conducting field pilots and looking to move toward commercial pilot scales by 2025. This technology will open the door for distributed and centralized Hydrogen production with low energy requirements and with zero carbon dioxide, offering the potential for significant reductions in GHG emissions in Western Canada and globally.