What has happened so far: An update on project activities and achievements within the first 18 months
What the consortium set out to do:
ēQATOR partners have joined forces to develop new and improved technologies to turn biogas into syngas more efficiently compared to current methods. Syngas is a valuable substance needed to make products like methanol. ēQATOR’s central innovation comprises improved catalysts and reactors combined with two electrical heating technologies: resistive heating (RH) and microwave heating (MWH).
Conventional syngas production involves large-volume reactors with fired burners that use fossil carbon feedstocks. By employing compact, electrically heated reactors, ēQATOR reduces reactor size (up to 90%) and volume of catalysts (50-75%), as well as resorting to renewable carbon sources instead of fossil fuels.
The overall goal is to make syngas production more efficient and environmentally friendly. Implementation of the ēQATOR technology is expected to decrease CO2 emissions in syngas production by 60-80 %, leading to substantial savings of CO2 emissions over the years. By 2030, savings could amount to 7Mt CO2/year, up to around 45 Mt CO2/year in 2045, leading to a total CO2 emissions savings of at least 330 Mt by 2045.
What has been achieved by 2024:
Comentarios