Firm to test out technology for purifying emissions
05/10/2012 00:01
“We see this cooperation as an important milestone,” says Dr. Yuval Davidor, CEO of Lextran.
HAGIT POWER station workers renovate the plant Photo: Yossi Weiss
Israel Electric Corporation signed on Tuesday a cooperation agreement with Petah
Tikveh-based company Lextran to establish a testing facility for the firm’s
emission purifying technology. The beta site will crop up at the IEC’s
largest coal-fired facility in Israel, at the 2,600-megawatt Orot Rabin Power
Plant, where Lextran will be able to conduct statistical data analyses on the
performance of its innovation.
Aiming to remove nearly all of the toxins
present in the flue gases emitted by power plants, the new technology is able to
treat sulfur oxides, nitrogen oxides and mercury in a single absorption tower,
according to the company.
“We see this cooperation as an important
milestone,” said Dr. Yuval Davidor, CEO of Lextran. “Although Lextran already
has commercial deployments worldwide, we do not have a testing facility that
operates 24/7 on real flue gases of a coal-firing power plant. Erecting such a
facility at the Orot Rabin power plant will provide unrestricted access and
availability to perform tests that we do not have at the sites of our customers
worldwide.”
Recently, Lextran also signed multimillion shekel contracts
for the implementation of its technology in China. Employing the
technology, according to Lextran, saves 40 percent in capital and 50% in
operational costs for power plants, and also generates byproducts that can be
useful in agricultural fertilizers.
Working with the IEC, which has been
operating coal-fired plants for decades, will allow Lextran to further enhance
its ability to engineer and implement its technological expertise, according to
Davidor. Grateful to the IEC’s engineering division for its support, Davidor
praised the electric corporation for its unmitigated support, which will allow
Lextran to help “secure clean air for future generations.”
Yaakov Hain,
senior vice president for engineering projects at IEC, said that the electric
corporation has been evaluating several different types of technologies that
could help minimize flue gas emissions in a cost effective manner, and is in the
advanced stages of installing such systems per the demands of the Environmental
Protection Ministry.
“We see a lot of commercial and scientific potential
in the solution developed by Lextran,” Hain said. “We are more than happy to
join forces and provide the company an opportunity to perform tests on real
gases and obtain valuable data for further research and development and
commercial evaluation of the solution. Our support is a part of the broad
commitment by IEC for scientific and technological advance that will provide
cleaner air through reduction of the toxic emissions and promote Israeli
technologies.”