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Page 18
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Danielle Piekarski
Bonnie Drozdowski
Dr. Glenn Wilson
As the CCUS industry faces ongoing uncertainty, with economic challenges and evolving regulatory landscapes, one thing remains clear: The drive for scalable decarbonization is unwavering. Despite these hurdles, we continue to adapt and innovate, forging ahead with determination. Whether it be through technological diversification, enhanced safety measures, or improved monitoring solutions, we remain on course, ready to meet the global demand for sustainable, long-term carbon reduction.
We start by looking up, quite literally, to Canada, where Bonnie Drozdowski of InnoTech Alberta outlines the province’s efforts to remain competitive in an increasingly uncertain economic environment. Alberta’s energy industry is at a crossroads, where reducing emissions without sacrificing productivity is paramount. On page 5, Drozdowski emphasizes the importance of diversifying carbon capture technologies to lower costs and boost industry adoption. Alberta’s recent funding initiative to enhance carbon capture technology reflects a clear recognition of the need for more cost-effective solutions and how expanding the options available for CCUS will keep business competitive, ensuring that they have the tools necessary to significantly reduce their emissions over time.
Building on the theme of innovation, we turn to page 8, where Dr. Glenn Wilson of Halliburton examines the company’s breakthrough work in injectivity monitoring. Halliburton’s deployment of fiber optic sensing and acoustic-based monitoring technologies is transforming the way CO2 injection is measured in underground reservoirs. By capturing real-time data, Halliburton’s technology allows for more precise understanding of CO2 migration, which is essential for optimizing plume modeling and enhancing the effectiveness of carbon storage operations. Reports show that the public’s top concern of CCUS is safety, and this level of monitoring will ensure that injection operations are safer, more efficient, and more reliable.
On page 10, we delve into Twelve’s work on carbon transformation technologies, which represent a game-changing shift in how we think about carbon emissions. Twelve is leading efforts to convert CO2 into valuable products like fuels, chemicals and materials using electrolysis. This emerging approach to carbon utilization not only helps capture carbon but also puts it to productive use, thus accelerating the transition to a circular carbon economy. By expanding the potential uses of captured CO2, Twelve is providing an innovative path toward achieving sustainability goals while simultaneously creating economic value.
When focusing on carbon dioxide removals, it is important to address the voluntary carbon market (VCM). On page 14, we focus on carbon removal through bioenergy with carbon capture and storage. This growing market is shaping the future of carbon removal strategies, as industries seek to offset emissions and meet sustainability targets. The article sheds light on how the VCM is evolving, and how it offers both challenges and opportunities for companies aiming to participate in carbon removal initiatives. Finally, we bring it right back to the public’s top concern—safety. The importance of pipeline safety in the growing CCUS infrastructure landscape cannot be overstated. As Dave Elam from TRC Environmental Corp. emphasizes on page 18, transporting captured CO2 over long distances presents a significant challenge, requiring robust regulatory frameworks and innovative monitoring solutions. His insight highlight the need for safe, well-regulated pipelines to ensure the scalability of CCUS projects and maintain public trust as these technologies expand.
As we look to the future, the path forward for CCUS may still be filled with challenges, but our collective adaptability, innovation and commitment to decarbonization will guide us. By embracing new technologies, strengthening safety measures and fostering collaboration, we are building a foundation for scalable, long-term solutions.
DANIELLE PIEKARSKI
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Bonnie Drozdowski Executive Director of Environment, Bio-Industrial and Clean Technologies InnoTech Alberta
bonnie.drozdowski@innotechalberta.ca
In the face of economic uncertainty, diversifying carbon capture technology will help keep Canada’s industry competitive globally. Expanding the range of carbon capture, utilization and storage options available to companies will increase adoption and reduce the cost of this essential technology.
Canada is entering a time of economic uncertainty. Many discussions have centered around the need to increase the productivity of Canada’s industries to remain competitive on a global stage. The energy industry has been looking across its operations to find ways to cut costs while maintaining efficiency and environmental performance.
There have been many conversations about various aspects of production, but finding ways to bring costs down when it comes to emissions reduction is essential to the industry remaining competitive globally. Carbon capture utilization and storage (CCUS) technology is a big part of that conversation.
In late January, it was announced that InnoTech Alberta would receive a total of $4.5 million from Natural Resources Canada, the government of Alberta and industry to improve the energy and cost efficiency of the leading carbon capture technology, and this has Alberta’s energy industry talking. They already see the potential for this and other emerging commercial CCUS technologies to be integrated into their operations, reducing the emissions intensity of energy production. However, the next stage of that conversation is often more complicated. Commercially available carbon capture technology is still too expensive for widespread adoption.
We know that the use of existing commercially available technology will allow the industry to make progress on reducing emissions for targeted parts of their operations, but, more variations and options in CCUS technologies are going to be needed to make further significant emissions reductions possible in the future.
Investing in the adoption of current CCUS technology isn’t the only answer. We can (and should) invest in diversifying the types of technologies available for adoption. That’s where InnoTech Alberta comes in. As Alberta's leading research and technology organization, we ensure that Alberta is always one step ahead by providing innovative solutions to global challenges facing industries, businesses and the public sector.
Currently, there is only one widely available type of carbon capture technology and only a few technology vendors provide it globally. Not only does that make the technology expensive, but it also means that this single technology must fit all needs.
Increased competition will help CCUS technology improve. For example, increasing the number of alternative fuel vehicles available for purchase, including those relying on hydrogen, is increasing competition and reducing the up-front costs for consumers. They offer a range of fuel options that fit consumers’ diverse needs. The same supply-and-demand equation will be true on an industrial scale for CCUS. InnoTech is helping speed that process along.
By connecting with technology developers and users, we are identifying the emerging challenges the industry faces, allowing us to identify and kick-start the development of new solutions that will help reduce and capture emissions while lowering costs.
Our work in this space is already making an impact. The $4.5 million in funding provided by the Government of Alberta, NRCan and industry will enable us to evaluate a new, more cost-effective and energy-efficient version of the existing amine carbon capture process, the most widely available carbon capture technology. A new technology that captures and stores emissions directly from the exhaust stacks of heavy haulers is ready to be tested in the field as well. And we’re also looking way outside the box; our team is developing brand-new technologies that reduce the need to capture carbon at all.
Not all these technologies will make it into the field, but expanding the range of potential options available is the first step to diversifying any market. By spurring their development now, we are ensuring that enough of these technologies will be available to help the industry continue to reduce emissions into the future. If there were ever a time for work like this, it’s now.
Green Plains Inc. has begun construction on compression infrastructure for its carbon capture and storage project in Nebraska, marking a key milestone in the company’s transition to low-carbon biofuels and ingredients. The new compression equipment will facilitate the permanent sequestration of 800,000 tons of biogenic CO2 annually from Green Plains’ facilities in Central City, Wood River, and York, with the project slated for completion in the second half of 2025. This initiative is part of Green Plains’ “Advantage Nebraska” strategy, positioning the company as an early leader in biogenic CO2 sequestration. Additionally, Green Plains has announced the temporary idling of its Clean Sugar Technology facility in Shenandoah, Iowa, to optimize its product mix. Despite this pause, the company remains confident in the CST process and its long-term commercial potential.
Baker Hughes and Frontier Infrastructure have announced a strategic partnership to advance large-scale carbon capture and storage and power solutions across the U.S. The collaboration focuses on the development of the Sweetwater Carbon Storage Hub in Wyoming, one of the largest open-source carbon sequestration assets in the country. Frontier, which holds three Class VI permits, will use Baker Hughes' innovative technologies in well design, CO2 compression and monitoring to enhance project execution. In addition, Frontier is expanding its infrastructure with 256 MW of gas-fired power generation capacity to meet rising energy demands across Wyoming and Texas, particularly driven by data centers and industrial operations. This partnership will deliver scalable, low-carbon solutions, combining gas-fired power generation with permanent carbon storage to address growing industrial needs while supporting decarbonization goals.
Value Maritime has installed its advanced Exhaust Gas Cleaning System and carbon capture unit aboard the Nexus Victoria, an LR1 product tanker owned by Mitsui O.S.K. Lines, Ltd. (MOL). This installation is a significant step in reducing CO2 emissions in the shipping industry. The 15-MW Filtree system filters sulphur and fine particulate matter, capturing 10% of the vessel’s CO2 emissions, with scalability up to 30%. Nexus Victoria is the first LR1 tanker to use this system, marking a milestone in MOL's sustainability efforts. The system’s plug-and-play design also allows for captured CO2 to be offloaded for use in various industries like greenhouse cultivation and methanol production. MOL aims to achieve net-zero GHG emissions by 2050, and with this collaboration, both companies are advancing carbon capture solutions to build a carbon-neutral shipping industry.
In a recent move, Heirloom entered an agreement with United Airlines Ventures Sustainable Flight Fund, allowing the airline to purchase up to 500,000 tons of carbon dioxide removal. The captured CO2 will be used for sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) production or stored underground. This partnership marks United Airlines' first investment in direct air capture (DAC) technology. Aviation, responsible for about 2.5% of global emissions, faces challenges in reducing carbon, but DAC offers a solution by producing SAF from captured CO2. As SAF scales, DAC will be essential for reducing residual emissions, helping aviation achieve net zero goals. Heirloom’s DAC technology could also support other hard-to-decarbonize industries, like shipping, in their transition to net zero.
California Resources Corp. and its carbon management business, Carbon TerraVault (CTV), have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with National Cement Company of California to support the Lebec Net Zero initiative, which aims to produce carbonneutral cement at National Cement’s facility in Lebec, California. CTV will develop transportation and sequestration solutions for up to 1 million metric tons of CO2 per year captured from the plant. The project, one of 33 selected for funding by the U.S. Department of Energy, will integrate carbon capture technology and use biomass fuel from agricultural byproducts. It is expected to make the facility California’s first net-zero cement plant, aligning with Kern County's carbon management vision and promoting local economic benefits. Operations are slated to begin in 2031, with the project benefiting from up to $500 million in DOE funding. CTV’s efforts in carbon capture now total nearly 9 million metric tons per year of CO2 emissions under consideration.
Bison Low Carbon Ventures Inc. has received D065 scheme approval from the Alberta Energy Regulator for its Meadowbrook Carbon Storage Hub project in Sturgeon County, Alberta, with commercial operations set to begin by the end of 2025. This approval marks the Meadowbrook Project as the first to achieve this milestone under Alberta’s open access carbon sequestration hub initiative. Supported by major shareholders Marubeni Corp. and Mizuho Bank Ltd., Bison plans to develop the project in stages, starting with volumes under 100,000 tons per year, eventually scaling up to over 3 million tons per year as demand for CO2 sequestration services grows. The Meadowbrook Project will provide a strategic CO2 sequestration solution to industrial emitters in the Edmonton area, benefiting from its early in-service date and the suitability of the Woodbend Group storage reservoir.
Halliburton tests acoustic-based injectivity monitoring at the perforation scale to characterize supercritical fluid injection into permeable rock formations at reservoir conditions
In many underground injection control operations, injection allocations across the reservoir interval are not measured and thus are unknown. This is further complicated for a fluid like supercritical carbon dioxide (CO2) because injectivity is expected to vary significantly over time due to reservoir dynamics like pressure cycling and salt precipitation. If anything, these dynamics place a higher priority on storage operators measuring CO2 injectivity at the highest possible spatial resolution. This allows plume models to be optimally history-matched with time-lapse seismic imaging. The result is higher confidence in forecasting plume migration during and after injection operations.
Over the past 15 years, the oil and gas industry has seen the rapid adoption of fiber optic sensing for downhole monitoring of distributed temperature and acoustic sensors along the entire wellbore for a wide variety of production and injection applications. Fiber optic cables installed behind casing or on tubing, along with injection and tubing pressure and temperature gauges, provide crucial downhole data about the reservoir dynamics. In unconventional wells, fluids and proppants were pumped in stages without any feedback about conformity or stimulated reservoir volume. This raised questions about where oil and gas production was really coming from. In recent years, fiber optic sensing has “turned on the lights” downhole. Its real-time analysis now advises on stimulation operations down to the perforation cluster interval, improving our understanding of where oil and gas are produced.
The carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) industry has begun deploying fiber optic sensing in Class VI wells for measuring, reporting, and verification (MRV) of mechanical integrity testing and vertical seismic profiling (VSP). VSP provides time-lapsed images of the CO2 plume developing in the subsurface. Ideally, time-lapse VSP imaging should be calibrated with CO2 volumetrics. Without fiber optics, operators have limited sensing capabilities across the reservoir interval and require periodic interventions to evaluate well integrity. Certain unconventional and CCUS wells use similar perforated cased hole completions across the reservoir intervals. An opportunity exists to leverage the learning curve from unconventionals and quantify CO2 injection allocations down to the perforation cluster to help improve CCUS injection control operations and time-lapse VSP imaging of the CO2 plume.
However, a significant gap exists in MRV: the measurement of supercritical CO2 flow at the scale of the perforation cluster. In both research and practice, we still do not have the full picture of how CO2 is being dynamically allocated in CCUS wells during injection operations. Injection intervals can span hundreds to thousands of feet. This adds a layer of complexity when we try to determine where and how much CO2 is being injected into which formation and when. While injection
logging provides some insights, they are only periodic snapshots and can alias temporal reservoir dynamics.
Halliburton Jet Research Center in Alvarado, Texas includes perforation laboratories that are effectively at-scale, physical reservoir simulators for understanding production and injection operations. Studies are routinely performed to optimize the perforation designs to help maximize injection or production from a specific formation. This leads to an optimized design of service for in-field perforating operations and improved well productivity. Instrumentation for acoustic-based injectivity monitoring with distributed acoustic sensing (DAS) further augments those simulations to understand CO2 injectivity at reservoir temperature and pressure. We can develop unique relationships between the acoustic responses and supercritical fluid flow rates from well to formation via perforations at different pressures and temperatures.
Learning from unconventionals, fiber optic sensing can turn on the lights for CCUS and quantify CO2 injection allocations. We can now perform at-scale simulations in the perforation laboratory to determine the expected acoustic responses for specific reservoirs, perforating designs, and injection operations. We can understand the acoustic response to individual CCUS operations a priori. When implemented in VISUM, our real-time downhole analysis software, this accelerated learning curve helps to deliver quantification of CO2 injection allocations at the perforation interval from the start-up of injection operations. This reduces the need for in-situ calibration with intervention operations. The improved understanding of reservoir dynamics helps improve our understanding of plume development and migration by calibrating time-lapse VSP images with CO2 volumetrics.
To learn more about how Halliburton helps companies overcome CCUS challenges, visit www.halliburton.com/CCUS.
Author: Dr. Glenn Wilson, Head of Measurement, Reporting & Verification, Low Carbon Solutions
Halliburton can support your decarbonization journey by delivering cost-effective CO2 and Hydrogen subsurface storage solutions to help meet your organization’s long-term sust ainabilit y commitments.
Together, we can engineer the future of energy
Learn more at halliburton.com/CCUS
Twelve is transforming CO2 into essential products.
By Youssef Tazi
Carbon dioxide has long been cast as a villain— a harmful emission to be reduced and eliminated, but CO2 is also a resource with transformative and valuable potential.
CO2 enables new ways of manufacturing. It helps diversify hydrocarbon production right here in the U.S. It serves as a building block for sustainable fuels, chemicals and materials, reducing reliance on imported fossil fuels and creating a more circular economy. By leveraging CO2 as a feedstock, industries can drive innovation, economic growth and decarbonization at scale.
Carbon transformation represents a paradigm shift in how we conceptualize emissions. Rather than viewing CO2 as industrial waste, this innovative approach recognizes it as a valuable, and locally available resource that can be harnessed to create the materials and fuels our society depends on.
Traditional carbon capture, utilization and storage technologies have primarily focused on sequestering CO2 underground or using it in processes like enhanced oil recovery. While these methods do reduce atmospheric carbon, they often fail to address the underlying issue: our dependence on fossil fuels for manufacturing essential products.
Carbon transformation takes a fundamentally different approach. By using CO2 as a feedstock—a raw material that can be
transformed into valuable products—this technology addresses emissions at their source while simultaneously reducing our reliance on petroleum for manufacturing.
At the heart of carbon transformation is the process of electrolysis, which uses renewable electricity to split CO2 molecules and water. Companies like Twelve have developed proprietary technology that converts these simple inputs—carbon dioxide, water and renewable energy—into complex chemicals and fuels traditionally derived from petroleum.
The resulting products, known as eFuels and eChemicals, are chemically identical to their fossil-derived counterparts but come with a crucial difference: they’re produced without extracting additional carbon from the earth. Instead, they utilize carbon that's already in our atmosphere or that was going to be emitted into the atmosphere, creating a more circular carbon economy.
“We’re taking carbon that would otherwise be emitted as a waste, and turning it into the building blocks for thousands of products we use every day,” says Nicholas Flanders, CEO of Twelve.
Twelve’s innovative carbon transformation process relies solely on CO2, water and renewable electricity to produce synthetic aviation fuel (SAF) and other low-carbon chemicals via CO2 electrolysis. The CO2 that Twelve’s process relies on can come from a variety of sources, including from the production of ethanol. That offers unique partnership opportunities for Twelve to develop proj-
SOURCE: TWELVE
ects with the agricultural industry and bring a strong added value to ethanol producers.
Ethanol is produced from the fermentation of sugars contained in crops, and in the United States, is mostly derived from corn. One bushel of corn grain yields equal parts one-third ethanol, distillers grains (used as an animal feed or a source of renewable natural gas), and CO2. About 80% of ethanol plants today vent their CO2 to the atmosphere, thus missing the opportunity to monetize 1/3 of their feedstock output. Capturing CO2 is an additional cost for producers, which historically has only been justified when there is a local market for it, but today, those new markets are growing.
The implications of this technology extend far beyond simple carbon capture. Thousands of consumer and industrial products that currently rely on petrochemicals could instead be manufactured using carbon captured from CO2 emissions or even directly from the air. From plastics and textiles to jet fuel and cleaning products, carbon transformation could revolutionize supply chains across numerous industries.
What makes this approach particularly powerful is that it doesn’t require companies to completely reinvent their products or processes. The eFuels and eChemicals produced through carbon transformation can be dropped into existing manufacturing systems, allowing for a smoother transition away from fossil fuel dependence.
“We’re not asking businesses to throw out decades of investment in their production infrastructure,” explains Youssef Tazi, CO2 business development manager at Twelve. “We're offering them a way to make the same products they always have, but with a carbon-neutral or even carbon-negative footprint.”
Perhaps most exciting is the potential for carbon transformation to help establish a truly circular carbon economy. Rather than the linear “extract, use, discard” model that has dominated industrial production for centuries, carbon transformation enables a cycle where CO2 becomes a continually recycled resource.
In this circular model, carbon dioxide emitted during industrial processes—which account for approximately 10% of global CO2 emissions—becomes the feedstock for new products, which will eventually release that carbon again at the end of their lifecycle.
This carbon can then be recaptured and transformed once more, creating a sustainable loop that minimizes the need to extract additional fossil resources. “We’re using an industrial version of photosynthesis,” says Etosha Cave, cofounder of Twelve. “Plants have been capturing and transforming CO2 for billions of years. We’re just accelerating that process and directing it toward creating specific, useful molecules.”
Beyond its environmental advantages, carbon transformation offers significant economic and security benefits. By developing and scaling these technologies domestically, the United States can position itself as a leader in next-generation industrial processes. This creates local jobs and technological expertise that strengthen our economy.
Carbon transformation also addresses supply chain vulnerabilities by reducing reliance on imported petroleum-based products. When companies can produce essential chemicals and fuels using locally captured carbon dioxide and renewable energy, they become less susceptible to global supply disruptions and price fluctuations
in the fossil fuel market. “This isn’t just about climate—it’s about American innovation and manufacturing competitiveness,” asserts James Martinez, former assistant secretary of energy. “As companies invest in carbon transformation infrastructure, they’re simultaneously investing in American industrial capacity and reducing reliance on imported energy and materials.”
While carbon transformation technology is still scaling up, its potential to address both emissions reduction and sustainable manufacturing makes it a compelling piece of our climate solution puzzle. Several factors will influence its widespread adoption:
1. Technological advancement: Continued improvements in efficiency, lower carbon capture costs and scalability and scalability will make carbon transformation more economically viable across a wider range of applications.
2. Policy support: Incentives for carbon utilization, such as tax credits for products made with captured carbon, can accelerate market adoption.
3. Corporate commitments: As more companies pledge to reduce their carbon footprints, demand for materials and fuels produced through carbon transformation will grow.
4. Consumer awareness: Increasing public recognition of “made from air” products will drive market demand for goods produced through carbon transformation.
As carbon transformation technology continues to develop and deploy at larger scales, we move closer to a future where the products we use every day are made from air—a future where carbon emissions become valuable inputs rather than harmful outputs.
This transformation of our relationship with carbon could be key to creating a sustainable, low-carbon economy. By turning our perception of carbon dioxide from problem to resource, we open new avenues for addressing a whole host of challenges, from supply chain resilience to energy independence, while continuing to produce the materials modern society relies on.
In this carbon-intelligent future, the question will no longer be how to eliminate carbon from our industrial processes, but rather, how do we best utilize it to create a more sustainable and resilient world?
By Laura Wente
Last year was officially the hottest on record—as verified by NASA, the World Meteorological Organization, and the National Centers for Environmental Information—and our planet surpassed the 1.5-degree Celsius tipping point warned of in the Paris Climate Agreement for the first time. Extreme weather is becoming more frequent and has already made an imprint on 2025, with impacts ranging from the devastating wildfires in southern California and landslides in Indonesia to floods in Argentina. While reducing carbon emissions is core to combating this catastrophic trend, we need to do more.
Carbon removal technologies offer a realistic pathway to permanently reverse legacy emissions and address carbon dioxide (CO2) released by sectors where reaching net zero is not yet feasible, giving us a fighting chance to reduce our global dependency on fossil fuels and other sources of carbon pollution. The voluntary carbon market (VCM) plays an essential role in this equation. It provides a mar-
The 2024 VCM and early 2025 market clearly show that customers are increasingly turning to high-quality carbon removals—predominantly from biomass-based solutions like BECCS—and they’re willing to make larger purchases when they trust the technology and supplier.
ketplace where organizations can proactively purchase carbon removals to offset the CO2 generated by their operations—particularly for hard-to-abate industries.
While the VCM is still relatively new, carbon dioxide removals (CDRs) are expected to grow in to more than $1 trillion market by 2050. To meet the growing needs of this market, it’s important to keep tabs on how customer preferences are evolving. Let’s take a look at three key insights (according to cdr.fyi) gleaned from 2024 market activity, as well as early indications from 2025 and what CDR buyers are looking for this year.
Engineered carbon removals, like those generated from bioenergy with carbon capture and storage (BECCS) or direct air capture (DAC) technologies, are reliable, measurable, and permanent, and in 2024, the market was clearly on the same page. Engineered CDRs captured significantly more of the market and did so through larger-volume transactions.
While the total number of VCM transactions dropped by 35%—mainly due to fewer transactions for DAC, enhanced weathering, and bio-oil—the total volume of engineered CDRs sold grew by an impressive 66% yearover-year. The average deal size ballooned by 155%, and 12 of the 20 biggest deals to date took place in 2024.
We’re seeing this trend continue into 2025, with the number of transactions for the first two months down by nearly 40% compared to the same period in 2024, but total volume sold increased exponentially, by 289%. In the same period, deal size increased again, this time by 544%. Fewer deals with higher volumes continue to be a predominant theme.
So, what CDR technology was responsible for driving the most market growth last year? As it turns out, BECCS was the go-to solution for large-volume carbon removal purchasers and the largest driver of market growth overall.
In 2024, BECCS volume rose 84% from the previous year, with transactions up 156%. In fact, three of the five biggest customer deals last year were predicated on BECCS-based carbon removals, including:
• Stockholm Exergi’s deal with Microsoft for 3.3 metric tons (mt) of CDRs
• Orsted’s deal with Microsoft for 1 mt of CDRs
• Orsted’s deal with Equinor for 0.33 mt of CDRs
BECCS permanently removes carbon from the atmosphere, and at the same time, it generates 24/7 renewable power. This provides an additional revenue stream to the project while adding a renewable energy
source to the grid in support of increasing load growth. In short, BECCS-derived removals produce scalable, high-quality CDRs and renewable energy.
Interestingly, BECCS wasn’t the only biomass-fueled solution with increased transactions in 2024—biochar and biomass removal also saw YOY growth. This success is well-positioned to continue into 2025. For example, biofuels, which are derived from biomass, were named as one of the only preferred nonfossil fuel energy solutions in President Trump’s national energy emergency declaration, alongside hydro, geothermal and nuclear. This paves the way for additional growth, while intermittent renewables like wind and solar face new headwinds.
There are indications that the policy environment will only foment this trend of biomass-based engineered carbon removal growth. While it’s too soon to say if BECCS will continue to drive similar growth in 2025, we’re already seeing the year begin with two big biochar deals: Google’s deal with Charm
for 100kt of CDRs, and with Varaha for 100,000 tons of CDRs.
For the voluntary carbon market to continue to mature, customers need ways to increase confidence in their purchases. To accomplish this, buyers are increasingly turning to:
• Proven, reliable technologies like BECCS: Purchasers want to ensure their investments are truly permanent, measurable and auditable.
• More established suppliers: Investing in smaller, niche projects can increase risk and raise red flags during the corporate vetting process. By going with experienced providers, customers can have greater confidence that projects will reach completion and operate as planned.
• Offerings with greater pricing transparency and standardization: Customers want to ensure they’re landing fair
market rates. As they see prices settle into consistent ranges, confidence is expected to rise.
The 2024 VCM and early 2025 market clearly show us that customers are increasingly turning to high-quality carbon removals—predominantly from biomass-based solutions like BECCS—and they’re willing to make larger purchases when they trust the technology and supplier. Knowledgeable developers working to responsibly develop and construct projects and provide clear insight into the quality of the product they are producing, including how those products contribute to the net zero journey, can earn customer confidence. In turn, this can help expedite the reversal of the legacy emissions warming our planet, giving us a fighting chance against climate change.
Author: Laura Wente, senior vice president, Commercial Elimini
capture in the United States follows safe pipelines.
By David Elam
There are approximately 8,500 kilometers of carbon dioxide (CO2) pipelines in the United States today, primarily in place to serve the enhanced oil recovery (EOR) market. In 2021, researchers from Princeton University analyzed five pathways to achieve net zero carbon emissions by 2050. Expansion of carbon dioxide capture, transport, usage and storage was identified as a requirement for each pathway with one pathway forecasting a need for approximately 106,000 kilometers of carbon dioxide pipeline by 2050. The study acknowledged the challenges of permitting all infrastructure projects, but did not discuss the importance of pipeline safety with respect to permitting carbon dioxide and transport and storage projects.
The construction and operation of carbon dioxide pipelines in the U.S. date to the 1980s and have been subject to manageable permitting challenges and characterized by few accidents. On Feb. 22, 2020, however, a pipeline transporting supercritical carbon dioxide ruptured near Satartia, Mississippi, resulting in the release of approximately 31,400 barrels of carbon dioxide (approximately 3,640 metric tons) requiring the evacuation
of approximately 200 residents and sending 45 individuals to the hospital for treatment. Excluding the Satartia accident, over the 10-year period from 2010 to 2021, 66 accidents on pipelines transporting supercritical-phase carbon dioxide have been reported to the Pipeline Safety and Hazardous Materials Administration (PHMSA). The average release of carbon dioxide for these 66 accidents was 920 barrels (approximately 110 metric tons) and no accident resulted in fatalities or injuries regarding hospitalization. The Satartia accident dwarfed the historical average by more than 30-fold, a troublesome statistic considering the of importance carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS) with respect to net zero goals.
The magnitude and severity of the Satartia event gained national attention and prompted PHMSA to undertake a deliberate approach to regulate carbon dioxide pipeline safety in the U.S. PHMSA investigated the Satartia carbon dioxide pipeline and reported the issues leading to the pipeline failure and the problems associated with prompt response to the incident. Based on those findings, on April 8, 2022, PHMSA issued a rule requiring new or reconstructed carbon dioxide pipelines to install remote or automatic shutoff valves in rare instances of pipeline failure. PHMSA then scheduled a meeting in Des Moines, Iowa, from May 31 through June 1, 2023, to obtain public comment on carbon dioxide pipeline safety. After analyzing both the PHMSA Failure Investigation Report for the Satartia accident and public comments, PHMSA submitted a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) for carbon dioxide pipelines to the Office of Management and Budget for review on February 1, 2024. On January 10, 2025, PHMSA issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) for carbon dioxide pipelines.
The NPRM, although withdrawn by presidential executive order, remains instructive about the future regulation of carbon dioxide pipelines in the U.S. In summary, the proposed regulations would have modified regulations found at 49 CFR 195 (Transportation of Hazardous Liquids by Pipeline) governing highly volatile liquids (HVLs, including carbon dioxide) in 18 areas, 16 of which are directly related to carbon dioxide pipelines as summarized below:
1. The definition of carbon dioxide would have been amended to (1) include not only supercritical-phase carbon dioxide but also carbon dioxide in the gas and liquid phases, and (2) lower the threshold of carbon dioxide molecules present in the product stream (in any phase) necessary for a pipeline to be considered a “carbon dioxide” pipeline subject to greater than 50% of the molecules in the product stream.
2. Operators of carbon dioxide pipelines would have needed to perform vapor dispersion analyses to determine whether a release from their pipelines “could affect” a high consequence area (HCA) and would therefore be subject to integ-
rity management program requirements. If the pipeline operator determined that its pipeline could affect an HCA, it would have been required to install fixed vapor detection and alarm systems and consider installation of emergency flow restricting devices.
3. In excavated trenches, operators of regulated pipelines would have had to have instruments and tools capable of detecting hazardous concentrations of hazardous liquids, carbon dioxide, and any known deleterious constituents in the product stream. This proposed rule would have also required carbon dioxide pipeline operators to provide equipment, instruments, tools and materials that might be used in the event of an emergency on a carbon dioxide pipeline to local emergency response organizations and train them on their proper use.
4. Onshore carbon dioxide pipeline operators would have been required to communicate with affected entities (including, but not limited to the public) during a carbon dioxide pipeline emergency as soon as practicable during an emergency.
5. Carbon dioxide pipelines constructed, replaced, relocated or otherwise changed after the effective date of the regulation would have required enhanced design to mitigate fracture propagation through the pipe.
6. All spike hydrostatic testing requirements would have been consolidated in a single section. Additionally, new hydrostatic pressure testing requirements would have been established.
7. Carbon dioxide would have been removed from the list of acceptable test mediums for spike hydrostatic testing.
8. Enhanced conversion to service requirements for pipelines converted to carbon dioxide service would have been established.
9. Enhanced right-of-way surface condition inspection requirements would have been established to require carbon dioxide pipeline operators to look for indicators of leakage from the pipeline, geologic hazards in the area that could affect the pipeline, nearby construction activity, areas of reduced depth of cover, and any other factors that may affect safety and operation.
10. An additional depth of cover classification for agricultural areas would have been established requiring regulated pipelines to be installed so that the cover between the top of the pipe and the ground level, roadbed, river bottom or underwater natural bottom would comply with a minimum depth of 48 inches for normal excavation in agricultural areas.
11. Leak detection systems would have been required for carbon dioxide pipelines built, replaced or relocated after the effective date. Carbon dioxide pipelines existing on the effective date of any final rule would have had four years from that effective date to implement leak detection system requirements.
12. Fixed vapor detection and alarm systems would have been required at each pump station, compressor station, meter station and valve station.
13. Carbon dioxide pipeline operators would have had to consider deleterious constituents (e.g., water and hydrogen sulfide) for assessment scheduling, information analysis and risk analysis.
14. Carbon dioxide pipeline operators would have had to establish a monitoring and mitigation program for constituents within carbon dioxide product streams that can affect corrosion, including microbes, water, oxygen, methane, hydrogen sulfide, carbon monoxide, sulfur oxides, and nitrous oxides.
15. The distance-based reporting exception for safety-related conditions would have been eliminated.
16. Carbon dioxide pipeline operators would have been required to establish emergency planning zones extending two miles on either side of their pipelines to enable operators to adequately identify those community members requiring emergency response information.
The Satartia event galvanized both pipeline and CCUS opponents who have been able to swiftly and systematically challenge carbon dioxide pipeline safety. The efforts of these groups have significantly contributed to Navigator CO2 Ventures’ decision to terminate its Heartland Greenway pipeline and to Summit Carbon Solutions’ decision to suspend carbon dioxide pipeline efforts in South Dakota. The Navigator pipeline would have collected carbon dioxide from ethanol plants in Illinois, Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, and South Dakota for storage underground at Mt. Simon sandstone formation in central Illinois. The Summit pipeline was designed to collect carbon dioxide from biofuel plants in Iowa, Minnesota, Nebraska, North Dakota and
South Dakota for deep underground storage in North Dakota.
The Pipeline Safety Trust, a nonprofit public charity promoting pipeline safety through education and advocacy, reviewed the proposed rule favorably noting that it had incorporated many of the lessons learned from the Satartia accident. It criticized the proposed rule for not including a requirement for an odorant in carbon dioxide pipelines and for not including performance standards for leak detection equipment.
Unfortunately, the advancement of this rule has been delayed. The public comment period would have drawn comments from carbon dioxide pipeline operators, carbon dioxide pipeline and CCUS opponents, and CCUS advocates and resulted in a rule intended to protect the public while allowing the advancement of carbon capture pipelines and storage reservoirs. In the absence of carbon dioxide pipeline safety regulations, pipeline and CCUS opponents control the narrative. As advocates for safe, reliable and full-scale CCUS, we must engage our elected officials to direct PHMSA to return its attention to carbon dioxide pipeline safety and build on the solid work it has already done.
References available upon request.
Author: David Elam, TRC Companies delam@trccompanies.com 919-967-0500
Helping Clients Develop and Implement Energy
Advanced BioFuels USA
507 North Bentz Street Frederick, MD 21701
Joanne Ivancic, Executive Director 301-644-1395 info@advancedbiofuels.org advancedbiofuels.info
AgCountry Farm Credit Services PO Box 6020 1900 44th Street South Fargo, ND 58108
Jessica Bernstien, Vice President 701-499-2633 jess.bernstien@agcountry.com www.agcountry.com
American Carbon Alliance 4020 121st Street Urbandale, IA 50323
Tom Buis, CEO 515-423-0694 tbuis@americancarbonalliance.org americancarbonalliance.org
American Coalition for Ethanol 5000 South Broadband Lane Suite 224 Sioux Falls, SD 57108
Katie Muckenhirn, Vice President of Public Affairs 605-306-6107 kmuckenhirn@ethanol.org ethanol.org
Amros Corporation 14006 Drakewood Drive
Sugar Land, TX 77498
Vladimir G. Ingerman, Founder & CEO 281-240-0881 ingerman@amros.us amros.us
Biotech Applied Research 1535 FL-64, Suite 101 Avon Park, FL 33825
Zack Farr, COO 863-443-7283 z.farr@biotechappliedresearch.org biotechappliedresearch.org
CFO Systems LLC
10832 Old Mill Road, Suite 2 Omaha, NE 68154
Chris Payne, Director of Marketing & Recruitment 402-594-1600 cpayne@cfosystemsllc.com cfosystemsllc.com
Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) PO Box 681807 Houston, TX 77268
Jalene Fritz, Membership Committee 970-593-2434 jalenemf@gmail.com cti.org
Carbon Capture Technology
Bioenergy Carbon Capture
CapCO2 Solutions
20-32 Linden Street Queens, NY 11385
Jeff Bonar, CEO 561-212-0451
jeff@capco2.solutions www.capco2.solutions
Salof Limited Inc.
IH 5141 IH 35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Carbon Storage Solutions
31375 Great Western Drive Windsor, CO 80550
Dan Sanders, CEO/President 970-674-2910
drsanders@frontrangeenergy.com
Haffner Energy Inc.
Greentown Labs
4200 San Jacinto Street Houston, TX 77004
Nathalie Ionesco, COO 713-297-1406
nathalie.ionesco@haffner-energy.com www.haffner-energy.com
Mercurius Biorefining 3190 Bay Road Ferndale, WA 98248
Eric Seck, Chief Operations Officer eric@mercuriusbiorefining.com mercuriusbiorefining.com
Electrochaea
Semmelweisstrasse 3 Planegg-Steinkirchen 82152 Germany 49-89-3249-3670 info@electrochaea.com electrochaea.com
ENERGYchange.com PO Box 24017
Guelph, ON N1E 6V8 Canada
James Roszel, Administrator 519-767-2913 webmaster@energychange.com www.energychange.com
Hexas Biomass
900 Jefferson Street Southeast #1113 Olympia, WA 98501
Wendy Owens, Founder & CEO 360-890-0775 info@hexas.com www.hexas.com
Iowa Renewable Fuels Association 5550 Wild Rose Lane, Suite 340 West Des Moines, IA 50266
Lisa Coffelt, Marketing Director 515-829-0478
lcoffelt@iowarfa.org www.iowarfa.org
Nikua Training CenterRegistered 501 (c) Non-Profit Organization 2397 Northwest Kings Blvd #174 Corvallis, OR 97330
Daniel Shafer, CEO & Co-Director 541-224-6189 operations@nikua.org www.nikua.org
ONYM Group 3500 Broadway Avenue Montreal East, QC H1B 5B4 Canada
Mustapha Ouyed, Executive Vice President 514-895-9592 mustapha.ouyed@groupeonym.com groupeonym.com
Maryland Forestry Foundation
124 South Street
Annapolis, MD 21401
Gary Allen, President 301-717-1579
gallenbay@gmail.com marylandforestryfoundation.org
North Dakota Ethanol Producers Association 1605 East Capitol Avenue Bismarck, ND 58502
Laura Lacher, Executive Director 701-355-4458
llacher@clearwatercommunications.net www.facebook.com/ NorthDakotaEthanol
Renewable Energy Institute 6705 Bancroft Woods Austin, TX 78729
Monty Goodell, Executive Director 832-758-0027
info@carboncapturesequestration.com carboncaptureandsequestration.com
The New York Blower Company 7660 South Quincy Street Willowbrook, IL 60527
Ben Zastrow, Director of Marketing 630-794-5731 bzastrow@nyb.com www.nyb.com
Permanente Corporation
4265 San Felipe Street, Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Marc A. Seidner, President 310-569-6500
marc@permanentecorp.com
Daniel J. Seidner, Executive Vice President & CTO 310-433-4200
daniel@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Vaisala Inc. 3 Van De Graff Drive, Suite 140 Burlington, MA 01803
Justin Walsh, Business Development 781-537-1071
justin.walsh@vaisala.com www.vaisala.com/en/industriesapplications/ccus-carbon-captureutilization-storage
Yilkins PO Box 8210
Groningen 9728XA
The Netherlands
Maikel van Loo, Controller 3185-007-0553
m.vanloo@yilkins.com yilkins.com
Direct Air Capture
Brentwood Industries, Inc.
500 Spring Ridge Drive Reading, PA 19610
Jason Hill, Marketing Specialist 610-347-8979
jason.hill@brentwoodindustries.com www.brentwoodindustries.com/ products/mass-transfer
Moore Fans
800 South Missouri Avenue Marceline, MO 64658
Spencer Ward, Factory Representative 660-376-3575
spencer.ward@moorefans.com www.moorefans.com
Post-Combustion
AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc.
55 East Uwchlan Avenue, Suite 201 Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335
kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com
Nitto Denko
101 Metro Drive #700 San Jose, CA 95110
Marcel Benz, Director of Business Development 760-277-7605 marcel.benz@nitto.com www.nitto.com/us/en/products/ etechnology
Salof Limited Inc.
IH 5141 IH 35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Toshiba America Energy Systems
6623 West Washington Street West Allis, WI 53214
Laura Baumann, Director of Marketing 716-799-1080
laura.baumann@toshiba.com www.toshiba.com/taes
Delta CleanTech Inc.
#500 550 Sixth Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 0S2 Canada
Semhar Amine Zeremariam, Project Coordinator 306-359-2905
semhar.amine@deltacleantech.com deltacleantech.com
Epcon Industrial Systems LP PO Box 7060
(17777 Interstate 45 South Conroe, TX 77385)
The Woodlands, TX 77387
Angie Anderson, Sales/Marketing 936-202-1227 angie@epconlp.com epconlp.com
Nuada
18A Newforge Lane Belfast, Northern Ireland BT95PX United Kingdom
Stratos Stavrakakis, Business Development Manager 447-8-026-26-345
e.stavrakakis@nuadaco2.com nuadaco2.com
Precision Combustion, Inc.
410 Sackett Point Road North Haven, CT 06473
Stewart Rosenberg, Business Development Leader 203 287-3700
srosenberg@precision-combustion.com pci.energy
Sulzer
900 Threadneedle Street, Suite 700 Houston, TX 77079
Sebastian Arango, Carbon Capture Sales & Applications Manager 832-589-4843
sebastian.arango@sulzer.com www.sulzer.com
Anguil Environmental Systems 8855 North 55th Street Milwaukee, WI 53223
Hannah Pardee, Marketing Coordinator 414-365-6400 hannahp@anguil.com www.anguil.com
Optical Scientific
2 Metropolitan Court, Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
James William Shinkle, Business Development 301-963-3630 jwshinkle@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
ArborGen Inc.
408 Brighton Park Boulevard Suite 101 Summerville, SC 29486
JoAnna Brown, Marketing & Communications Manager 888-888-7158
info@arborgen.com www.arborgen.com/forest-carbonsequestration-afforestation
BKV Corporation
1200 17th Street, Suite 2100 Denver, CO 80202 720-375-9680 info@bkvcorp.com www.bkv.com
Halliburton
3000 N Sam Houston Pkwy E Houston, TX 77032
Rob Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead –North America Land 281-851-4430 robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS
Salof Limited Inc.
IH 5141 IH 35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
American BioCarbon, LLC 32525 Hwy 1 South White Castle, LA 70788 603-319-4485
info@americanbiocarbon.com americanbiocarbon.com
ARTi 2151 Dean Avenue Des Moines, IA 50317
Sales Team 515-495-5101
arti@arti.com
Renato Valverde, Carbon Analyst 515-495-5101
renato.valverde@arti.com
Bernardo del Campo, CEO 515-495-5101
bernardo.delcampo@arti.com www.arti.com
Atlas Copco Gas and Process 46 School Road Voorheesville, NY 12186
Todd Gibbs, Product Marketing Manager todd.gibbs@atlascopco.com
Onur Serin, Market Manager for Emerging Markets-CCUS onur.serin@atlascopco.com www.atlascopco.com/enus/compressors/products/ processairgasequipment
Biomass Controls PBC 30A Crabtree Lane Woodstock, CT 06281
Jeff Hallowell, Founder 860-315-5735
jeff@biomasscontrols.com biomasscontrols.com
DigiKerma
13800 Coppermine Road, Suite 115 Herndon, VA 20171
Irfan K. Ali, Founder & CEO 703-234-5562 info@digikerma.com carbonkerma.com
Sequestration cont.
GECA Environnement
1516 chemin du Club Nautique Lac Sergent, QC G0A 2J0 Canada
Suzanne Allaire, CEO 418-558-4762
suzanne.allaire@gecaenviro.com gecaenviro.com
Graves & Co. Consulting
1800 West Loop South #750 Houston, TX 77027
John L. Graves, President 713-650-0811
jgraves@gravesconsulting.us gravesconsulting.us
Greenedge
1876 23rd Street Southeast
Bemidji, MN 56601
Aaron Poxleitner, Project Manager 218-556-0810
aaronp@greenedgeco.com
Jason LaValley, CEO 218-444-3030
jasonl@lavalleyindustries.com greenedgeco.com
LI-COR
4647 Superior Steet Lincoln, NE 68504
LI-COR Sales, Technical Salesperson 800-447-3576
vanessa.wamsley@licor.com www.licor.com
Carbon Capture & Storage Summit
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385
service@bbiinternational.com
carboncapturestoragesummit.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 24
International Biomass Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassconference.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 24
North American SAF Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.safconference.com
Netherland, Sewell & Associates, Inc.
2100 Ross Avenue, Suite 2200 Dallas, TX 75201
Joe Mello, Vice President & Team Leader 713-654-4950
jmello@nsai-petro.com netherlandsewell.com
Tenaska, Inc. 14302 FNB Parkway Omaha, NE 68154
Manuel Herraiz, Director of Business Development 402-758-6223
mherraiz@tenaska.com www.tenaska.com
International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service
701-746-8385
service@bbiinternational.com www.fuelethanolworkshop.com
Sustainable Fuels Summit: SAF, Renewable Diesel & Biodiesel
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.sustainablefuelssummit.com
Alternative Fuels & Chemicals Coalition
1200 G Street Northwest, Suite 800 Washington, DC 20005
Dr. Ring Singh, Executive Vice President 202-922-0144 summer@altfuelchem.org www.altfuelchem.org
Industry Link
Sos. Stefan cel Mare 23 Bucharest, Sector 2 011736
Romania
Beatrice Ene, Managing Director 40-722-764-802
beatrice.ene@industrylink.eu industrylink.eu
Auctions
Maas Companies Inc.
PO Box 7127 Rochester, MN 55902
Tyler Maas, Director of Sales & Marketing
507-285-1444 maas@maascompanies.com www.maascompanies.com
Business Plans
A.T. Kearney
227 West Monroe Street Chicago, IL 60606
Neal Walters, Partner 416-389-7266
lorinda.chang@kearney.com kearney.com
Abhirutu Consultants
27/28 Himali Society Pune, Maharashtra 411004
India
Sanjay Jagtap, Founder/Director 91-9822394170 abhirutu@gmail.com
GIC Trade PO Box 151590 Chevy Chase, MD 20825
Richard Gilmore, President/CEO 301-799-0840 rickgilmore@gicgroup.com www.gicgroup.com
Jier Art Development LLC Shanghai China
Keren Zhou, Founder 86-15000575345 kerenzhou@jierart.com www.jierart.com
Modular Energy Solutions PO Box 2759 Santa Clara, CA 95055
Charles Nolan, President 408-483-5922 chucknln@sbcglobal.net www.modular-e.com
Life Cycle Associates
884 Portola Road, Suite A11 Portola Valley, CA 94028
Stefan Unnasch, Managing Director 650-461-9048 outreach@lifecycleassociates.com www.lifecycleassociates.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Environmental
NESTEC, Inc. PO Box 125 222 East Main Street Pen Argyl, PA 18072
Scott Brayton, Director of Sales 248-794-3701 sbrayton@nestecinc.com www.nestecinc.com
Burns & McDonnell 9400 Ward Parkway Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835 bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine
Chiz Bros. Refractory & Insulation Specialists
2117 Lincoln Boulevard Elizabeth, PA 15037
Mark Rhoa, Jr., Vice President of Sales 412-384-5220 mrhoajr@chizbros.com www.chizbros.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
My Source Solution, LLC
18926 Southwest 17th Court Miramar, FL 33029
Ritu Linhart, CEO/President 305-812-8288 rlinhart@mysourcesolution.com mysourcesolution.com
Optical Scientific Inc.
2 Metropolitan Court, Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
Donn Williams, Vice President of Sales & Marketing 301-524-1430 donnw@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
RTP Environmental Associates, Inc.
400 Post Avenue, Suite 405 Westbury, NY 11590
Jessica Karras-Bailey, Principal 516-333-4526
bailey@rtpenv.com www.rtpenv.com
TRC Environmental Corp. 207C Eisenhower Lane South Lombard, IL 60148
Daniel F. Grabowski, Project Director 312-533-2024 dgrabowski@trccompanies.com www.trccompanies.com
Trihydro Corporation 1252 Commerce Drive Laramie, WY 82070
Carly Sowecke, Project Geologist/ Hydrogeologist 307-460-0831 csowecke@trihydro.com www.trihydro.com
Feasibility Studies
Azura Associates International Inc. 22 King Street South, Suite 300 Waterloo, ON N2J 1N8 Canada
David Ellis, President & CEO 877-298-7288
info@azuraassociates.com azuraassociates.com
Benz Technology International, Inc. 2305 Clarksville Road Clarksville, OH 45113
Gregory Thomas Benz, President 937-289-4504 g.benz@benz-tech.com www.benz-tech.com
Canadian Wood Waste Recycling Business Group. (CWWR) #108-4301 B South Park Drive Suite 206
Stony Plain, AB T7Z 2A9 Canada
James A. Donaldson, CEO/SME Consultant 780-239-5445 jdonaldson@cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca
Isomer Project Group
115 Welborn Street, Suite A Greenville, SC 29601
Tyler Smith, Director of Business Development 864-565-9100
tyler.smith@isomer.group www.isomer.group
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
ResourceWise
15720 Brixham Hill Avenue, Suite 550 Charlotte, NC 28211
Angela Rockwell, Director of Marketing 803-269-7441
angela.rockwell@resourcewise.com resourcewise.com
Information Technology
Helle Engineering LLC
3102 Cedar Valley Court League City, TX 77573
Matthew Helle, CEO 409-502-1797
mhelle@helleengineering.com helleengineering.com
Project Development
Geostock Sandia 10930 West Sam Houston Parkway North, Suite 100 Houston, TX 77064
Sylvain Riba, President & CEO 346-314-4347
sylvain.riba@geostocksandia.com www.geostocksandia.com
Advanced Resources International, Inc.
1840 Mackenzie Drive, Suite 100 Columbus, OH 43220
Andrew Duguid, Vice President 703-528-8420
info@adv-res.com www.adv-res.com
Auris BioEnergy Inc.
75 State Street, Suite 100 Boston, MA 02109
Irshad Ahmed, President & CEO 617-955-0020
info@aurisbioenergy.com aurisbioenergy.com
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Pkwy East Houston, TX 77032
Mari Pillar, Sr. Marketing Manager of Low Carbon Solutions 281-871-6953
mari.pillar@halliburton.com www.halliburton.com/LCS
Consulting cont.
Project Development cont.
LEC Partners, Inc.
245 First Street, Suite 1800 Cambridge, MA 02142
Jason White, CEO 617-444-8750
info@lec-exec.com lee-enterprises.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Smart Strategies LLC
236 East 81st Street, Floor 2 New York, NY 10028
Nelson Garcez, CEO 646-594-5399
nelson.garcez@smartstrat.com www.smartstrat.com
Regulatory
Christianson CPA & Consultants
302 Southwest Fifth Street
Willmar, MN 56201
Jamey Cline, Partner 573-680-6499
jcline@christiansoncpa.com www.christiansoncpa.com
Fagus GreCon Inc.
648 Griffith Road, Suite A Charlotte, NC 28217
Eric Peterson, CEO 704-315-2736
epeterson@grecon.us www.fagus-grecon.com/en/fireprevention
HEMCO Corporation
711 South Powell Road
Independence, MO 64056
Jerry G. Schwarz, Marketing 816-8796-2900
jerry.schwarz@hemcocorp.com hemcocorp.com
IEP Technologies
417-1 South Street
Marlborough, MA 01752
Harland Conners, Marketing Specialist
855-793-3949
harland.conners@hoerbiger.com ieptechnologies.com
Site Selection
Graves & Co.
1800 West Loop South, Suite 750 Houston, TX 77027
John Graves, President 713-650-0811
jgraves@graves-co.com graves-co.com
Education
Northern Crops Institute 1300 18th Street North Fargo, ND 58102
Casey Peterson, Program Development Manager 701-231-4250 casey.peterson@ndsu.edu www.northern-crops.com
Carbon Capture & Storage Jobs
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com/jobs
Engineering/Construction
Buildings
Heitman Architects
555 West Pierce Road, Suite 130 Itasca, IL 60143
Paul Heiman, Director 630-773-3551
pheitman@heitmanarchitects.com www.heitmanarchitects.com
No Limite Exteriors 2369 20th Avenue Southeast Medicine Hat, AB T1A 3Y2
Canada
Adam Rudolph, Director 403-952-2484 nolimit@nolimitexteriors.com nolimitexteriors.com
CO2SeQure 10777 Westheimer Street, Suite 250 Houston, TX 77042
Stephen Chelette, Vice President of Carbon 281-744-1343 schelette@microseismic.com www.microseismic.com
Commodity Talent LLC
149 Terhune Road Princeton, NJ 08540
George Stein, Managing Director 917-545-9850
ghstein@commoditytalent.com www.commoditytalent.com
Global Talent Solutions PO Box 235 Frazee, MN 56544
Brian Bigger, President/Recruiter 218-206-6659 brian@globaltalentsolutions.com globaltalentsolutions.com
Olson Search International, Inc. PO Box 3468 Boulder, CO 80307
Jon Olson, President 800-985-5191 jon@olsonsearch.com olsonsearch.com
Advanced Cryogenics, Ltd. PO Box 419 Tavernier, FL 33070
Sam A. Rushing, President 305-852-2597 rushing@terranova.net www.carbondioxideconsultants.com
Pelican Energy Consultants 4099 Hwy 190 East Service Road Covington, LA 70433
Ed Covington, Vice President of Strategy & Markets 985-871-4200
ed.covington@pelicanenergy.com pelicanenergy.com
ABP Engineering 440 Regency Parkway Drive Suite 200 Omaha, NE 68114
David Miller, Vice President of Operations 402-502-4242
dmiller@abpengineeringllc.com www.abpengineeringllc.com
Evergreen Engineering®, Inc. 1740 Willow Creek Circle Eugene, OR 97402
Aaron Edewards, Business Development Director 541-484-4771
aedewards@eeeug.com evergreenengineering.com
Engineering/Construction cont.
Gregersen Structural Engineering, Inc.
175 Blackfoot Street Mesquite, NV 89027
Max A. Gregersen, Principal Structural-Seismic Engineer
385-232-1747
max@gsestructural.com www.gsestructural.com
ICM, Inc.
PO Box 397
310 North First Street Colwich, KS 67030
Adriana Albornoz, Director of Marketing & Communications 316-796-0900
adriana.albornoz@icminc.com icminc.com
Pond & Company
3500 Parkway Lane, Suite 500 Peachtree Corners, GA 30092
Ron Pagel, Sr. Client Manager 920-841-3286
ron.pagel@pondco.com www.pondco.com
R.C. Costello & Assoc., Inc.
1611 South Pacific Coast Hwy Suite 302
Redondo Beach, CA 90277
Rocky Costello, President 310-792-5870
crosenthal@rccostello.com www.rccostello.com
TTUS Inc.
1457 Ammons Street, Suite 107 Lakewood, CO 80214
Binh Le, General Manager 402-805-2968
binh.le@ttusinc.com ttusinc.com
Uzelac Industries Inc.
6901 Industrial Loop Greendale, WI 53129
Mia Ivetic, Marketing Manager 414-529-0240 mia@uzelacind.com uzelacind.com
Mead & Hunt
6737 West Washington Street Suite 3500 Milwaukee, WI 53214
Matt Quinn, Energy Project Developer 585-216-7076
matt.quinn@meadhunt.com meadhunt.com/markets/ renewableenergy
Saulsbury Industries
2951 East Interstate 20 Odessa, TX 79766
Savanah Cantleberry, Manager of Marketing & Communications 432-366-3686 mlongshaw@saulsbury.com www.saulsbury.com
Fagen, Inc.
501 West Hwy 212 Granite Falls, MN 56241
William Stark, Vice President of Business Development 507-829-7051 wstark@fageninc.com www.fageninc.com
Vista Projects
330-4000 Fourth Street Southeast Calgary, AB T2G 2W3
Canada
Leslie Cassidy, Business Development 403-255-3455
leslie.cassidy@vistaprojects.com www.vistaprojects.com
Industrial Gases
Linde
Pipeline
Lake Superior Consulting
130 West Superior Street, Suite 500 Duluth, MN 55802
Luke Wilkens, Business Development Manager 713-516-2546
lwilkens@lsconsulting.com www.lsconsulting.com
Tubacero
Vicente Guerrero 3729 Nte. Monterrey, NL 64500 Mexico
Arturo Marquez, Export Manager 52-81-8305-5536 amarquez@tubacero.com www.tubacero.com
Plant Construction
Salof Limited Inc.
IH 5141 IH 35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744
sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Strobel Companies 106 South Green Street Clarks, NE 68628
Larry Myers, Client Development 308-624-4999 lmyers@strobelenergy.com strobelenergy.com
Barnhart Crane & Rigging 3604 West Hovland Drive Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Hall Trask Equipment Co.
105 Rocsam Park Road Braintree, MA 02184
Mike Amaral, Operations Manager 781-380-8700
mamaral@hall-trask.com traskpetroleumequipment.com
INTEC Engineering GmbH
John-Deere-Str. 43 Bruchsal, Baden-Wuerttemberg D-76646
Germany
Christian Daniel, Key Account Manager 49-0-7251-93243-12 info@intec-energy.de www.intec-energy.de
Jenike & Johanson
400 Business Park Drive Tyngsboro, MA 01879 Sinah Watts, Marketing Manager 978-649-3300 swatts@jenike.com jenike.com
Liquidmetal 6207 Jim Snow Way Chattanooga, TN 37421
Jonathan Starling, Marketing Manager 423-541-3210
jstarling@lmce.solutions www.liquidmetal-coatings.com
Midwest Ironworks
708 Fourth Street East Horace, ND 58047
Dustin Hartman, Project Manager 320-760-7579
dustinh@midwestironworks.com www.midwestironworks.com
Plaas Incorporated 1427 Old West Main Street Red Wing, MN 55066 Taite Plaas, President 651-388-8881
taite@plaasinc.com www.plaasinc.com
EPC Burns & McDonnell
9400 Ward Parkway
Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835
bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine
7000 High Grove Boulevard
Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Roman Grosman, Director of Business Development 630-320-4148 roman.grosman@linde.com www.lindeus.com
Bill Vyhlidal, Business Development 712-522-0029 bvyhlidal@barnhartcrane.com www.barnhartcrane.com
Cambridge Pro Fab Inc. 84 Shaver Street Brantford, ON N3S 0H4
Canada
Jim Hodgins, Sales 519-998-5613
jhodgins@cambridgeprofab.com www.cambridgeprofab.com
Southeastern Construction 1150 Pebbledale Road Mulberry, FL 33860
James Green, Business Development Manager 863-428-1511
jamesg@secm.co www.southeasternconst.com
Todd & Sargent, Inc.
2905 Southeast Fifth Street Ames, IA 50010
Scott Sylvester, Vice President 515-956-4805
ssylvester@tsargent.com www.tsargent.com
Engineering/Construction continued
Site Management
Direct Companies
2320 West 54th Street North Sioux Falls, SD 57106
Kyle Davis, Marketing Associate 605-864-8472
kyle.davis@directcompanies.com directcompanies.com
Facilities
Operational
American Wood Fibers, Inc. 9740 Patuxent Woods Drive Suite 500 Columbia, MD 21046
Mike Pisczor, National Sales Manager 715-359-1336 mpisczor@awf.com www.awf.com
Well Construction
Halliburton
3000 N Sam Houston Pkwy E Houston, TX 77032
Rob Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead –North America Land 281-851-4430
robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS
SW Firefighting Foam & Equipment, LLC
25A Lone Pine Ridge Santa Fe, NM 87505
Casey Ryan, Manager 505-699-5068 cryan@swfirefightingfoam.com novacool.com
Attorneys
Husch Blackwell
14606 Branch Street, Suite 200 Omaha, NE 68154
David Gardels, Partner 402-964-5027
david.gardels@huschblackwell.com www.huschblackwell.com
Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP
701 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest Suite 200 Washington, DC 20004
Mark Riedy, Partner-Chair-Energy Practice
202-508-5823 mriedy@ktslaw.com www.ktslaw.com
Kutak Rock LLP 1650 Farnam Street Omaha, NE 68102
David Bracht, Attorney 402-981-2900 david.bracht@kutakrock.com www.kutakrock.com
McGrath North 1601 Dodge Street First National Tower, Suite 3700 Omaha, NE 68102
Steve Case, Attorney 402-341-3070
scase@mcgrathnorth.com www.mcgrathnorth.com
Publications
Verico Technology 230 Shaker Road Enfield, CT 06082
Brian Pahl, Sales Director 860-871-1200 bpahl@vericotechnology.com www.vericocontractcoating.com
Biodiesel Magazine
308 2nd Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biodieselmagazine.com
Biomass Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com
Ethanol Producer Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com ethanolproducer.com SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 29
Websites
SAFPath
New York, NY
Sara Fletcher, Director info@safpath.com safpath.com
Select Domains PO Box 4068 Naples, ME 04055
Robert Fogg, Owner 207-650-9494
Pellet Mill Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com/magazine
robertfogg@q-team.com www.facebook.com/profile. php?id=61557242306370
Carbon Capture Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 29
SAF Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304
Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com safmagazine.com
Carbon Dioxide-based Products
ABB Inc.
3700 West Sam Houston Parkway South Houston, TX 77042
Teri Lesniak, Marketing Communications Manager 440-585-8751 teri.lesniak@us.abb.com www.abb.com
Alaqua, Inc.
7004 Boulevard East, Suite 28A Guttenberg, NJ 07093
Vital Strumza, President 551-482-7568 alaqua@mindspring.com www.alaquainc.com
Beta Analytic 4985 Southwest 74th Court Miami, FL 33155
Beta Customer Care 305-662-7760
info@betalabservices.com www.betalabservices.com
Centrisys/CNP
9586 58th Place Kenosha, WI 53144
Jessie Jones, Marketing Associate 262-654-6006
jessiej@centrisys.us www.centrisys-cnp.com
Diamond Scientific 625 Peachtree Street Cocoa, FL 32922
Eric Provost, Marketing Manager 321-223-7500 eric@diamondsci.com diamondsci.com
Dimensional Energy 95 Brown Road M/S 1033 Ithaca, NY 14850
Siobhan Foley, Vice President of Product info@dimensionalenergy.com dimensionalenergy.com
Enerquip Thermal Solutions 611 North Road Medford, WI 54451
Troy Weik, Sales & Channel Manager 833-516-6888 sales@enerquip.com www.enerquip.com
Indeck Power
Equipment Company 1111 Willis Avenue Wheeling, IL 60090
Customer Service 847-541-8300 info@indeck-power.com indeck.com
Industrial Sales Solutions
3684 120th Court West Faribault, MN 55021
Mike Vogel, Sales Engineer 507-649-0751
mike.vogel@ind-sales.com www.ind-sales.com
Good Land Industrial LLC 16800 West Greenfield Avenue Brookfield, WI 53005
Jim Tassone, Owner 414-349-6664 jimt@goodlandind.com goodlandind.com
INTEREP Inc. PO Box 123 Golden, CO 80402
Gary Gerba, Sales Manager 412-676-7355 gary.g@interep.us interep.us
Instrumentation
Air Dimensions Inc. (An Ingersoll Rand Company) 1371 West Newport Center Drive Suite 101 Deerfield Beach, FL 33442
Christopher C. Williamson, Global Sales Manager 954-420-2218 cw@airdimensions.com www.airdimensions.com/en
AMETEK Process Instruments 150 Freeport Road Pittsburgh, PA 15238
Customer Service 412-828-9040 sales.ametekpi@ametek.com www.ametekpi.com
Endress+Hauser 2350 Endress Place Greenwood, IN 46143
Mike Powell, Digital Marketing 317-617-2704 mike.powell@endress.com www.us.endress.com
MRU Instruments
7902 Horseshoe Circle Humble, TX 77396
John Bickers, Vice President of Business Development 832-716-5218
jbickers@mru-instruments.com mru-instruments.com
Valve Actuators
Assured Automation
263 Cox Street Roselle, NJ 07203
Kim ONeill, Marketing Administrator 800-899-0553 kimo@aa-fs.com assuredautomation.com
Products & Services continued
AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc.
55 East Uwchlan Avenue, Suite 201 Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335
kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com
Assured Automation
263 Cox Street
Roselle, NJ 07203
Kim ONeill, Marketing Administrator 800-899-0553 kimo@aa-fs.com assuredautomation.com
BETE Fog Nozzle, LLC
50 Greenfield Street Greenfield , MA 01301 Customer Service 413-772-0846 sales@bete.com bete.com
Hydro-Thermal™ Corporation
400 Pilot Court Waukesha, WI 53188 Sales 262-548-8900 info@hydro-thermal.com www.hydro-thermal.com
Project Development & Finance
Accounting
Pinion
8801 Renner Boulevard, Suite 100 Lenexa, KS 66219
Kristin Chiera, Marketing Director 463-209-7650
kristin.chiera@pinionglobal.com www.pinionglobal.com
Debt Financing
Southeast Capital & Finance, LLC PO Box 581 2301 Dodge Street Searcy, AR 72145
Jay Barber, President & CEO 501-246-8675
jay@southeastcapital.net southeastcapital.net
Environmental Consultant
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer
612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
Syntek Resource Corporation 2143 18th Avenue Court Greeley, CO 80631
Sandra Robnett, CHM/CEO 970-356-9004
srobnett@gmail.com www.interasset.org
Feasibility Studies
Digester Doc 7835 West Mossy Cup Street Boise, ID 83709
Cindy Webster, Client Relations Specialist 208-278-2651
cindy@digesterdoc.com www.digesterdoc.com
Mergers & Acquisitions
Progressive Energy LLC 111 Veterans Memorial Boulevard Suite 1546
Metairie, LA 70005
Nick Cioll, CEO 469-951-3264 ncioll@totalgen.com
Valuation and Assets Services, LLC 2108 Carroll Creek View Frederick, MD 21702
K. Boison, Principal 301-646-4119 projects@valuationandassets.com www.valuationandassets.com
D3MAX, LLC
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Mark Yancey, CTO 701-746-8385 myancey@d3maxllc.com www.d3maxllc.com
KATZEN International, Inc. 3805 Edwards Road, Suite 500 Cincinnati, OH 45209
Robert E. Eickelberger, Vice President of Business Operations 513-351-7500 eickelberger@katzen.com www.katzen.com
Frosundaleden 2A Solna, Stockholm 16975 Sweden
Marika Hahtala, Head of Business Development, Marketing & Communications 35-81-033-11
marika.hahtala@afry.com www.afry.com
KSB 4415 Sarellen Road Henrico, VA 23231
Rene Kopp, Vice President 804-845-8156 rene.kopp@ksb.com ksb.com
Magnatrol Valve Corporation 67 Fifth Avenue Hawthorne, NJ 07506
David J. Calafiore, Product Manager 973-427-4341 davec@magnatrol.com www.magnatrol.com
Valin Corporation
5225 Hellyer Avenue, Suite 250 San Jose, CA 95138
Dave Molinari, Technical Sales Engineer 800-774-5630 dkapsch@valin.com www.valin.com
HengYe ® Inc. 11999 Katy Fwy, Suite 588 Houston, TX 77079
Mark Binns, Technical Business Director 502-232-5356 mark@hengyeinc.com hengyeinc.com
ProSim, Inc. 325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800 Philadelphia, PA 19106
Gabriel Turzo, Sales Director 215-600-3759 fives-prosim.sales@fivesgroup.com www.fives-prosim.com
Reiter USA 599 Colonial Drive Grand Junction, CO 81507 Kristof Reiter, CEO 888-428-5617 kristof@reiterscientific.com reiter.com
Saola Energy
200 West Douglas Avenue, Suite 230 Wichita, KS 67202
Ben Root, Manager 316-413-3345 broot@saolaenergy.com www.saolaenergy.com
Site Selection
Solar-Carbon Solutions
13700 Fifth Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55441
Andrew Leonard, Founder/Owner 612-232-2028
drew@solar-carbon.com solar-carbon.com
Government
National Carbon Capture Center
31800 Hwy 25 North Wilsonville, AL 35186
info@nationalcarboncapturecenter.com nationalcarboncapturecenter.com
Private
Carbolite Gero
11 Penns Trail, Suite 300 Newtown, PA 18940
Michael Sheairs, Digital Marketing Specialist 267-757-0351
info@verder-scientific.com www.carbolite-gero.com
Forest Concepts, LLC
3320 West Valley Hwy North Suite D110
Auburn, WA 98001
Mike Perry, CEO 253-333-9663
mperry@forestconcepts.com www.forestconcepts.com
MicroBio Engineering Inc. 3988 Short Street #100 San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
John Benemann, CEO 925-352-3352
johnbenemann@ microbioengineering.com microbioengineering.com
Pumps
Flowserve
5215 North O’Connor Blvd., Suite 700 Irving, TX 75039
Cheryl Moreland, Manager of Emerging Technologies Business Development 508-530-1520 cmoreland@flowserve.com
Marco Giambitto, Manager of Emerging Technologies Business Development 393-409-385477 mgiambitto@flowserve.com www.flowserve.com/en
Summit Lubrication
9010 County Road 2120 Tyler, TX 75707
Joshua Ware, Market Manager of Gas Compressors 903-579-9223 joshua.ware@klueber.com www.klsummit.com/en
Wanner Engineering 1204 Chestnut Avenue Minneapolis, MN 55403
Brian Rock, Marketing & Technical Publications 612-313-7872 brock@wannereng.com www.hydra-cell.com
Sukup Manufacturing Co. 1555 255th Street Sheffield, IA 50475
Brent Hansen, Commercial Accounts Manager 641-892-8105 bhansen@sukup.com www.sukup.com
Tank Connection
3609 North 16th Street Parsons, KS 67357
Jeremy Burke, Director of Sales/ Business Development 620-423-3010 sales@tankconnection.com www.tankconnection.com
Bruks Siwertell
5975 Shiloh Road, Suite 109 Alpharetta, GA 30005
Joanne Turnell, Sales Representative 905-519-8631
joanne.turnell@bruks-siwertell.com bruks-siwertell.com
NETZSCH Pumps 119 Pickering Way Exton, PA 19341
Robert LePera, Vice President 614-619-5550 robert.lepera@netzsch.com pumps-systems.netzsch.com/en-US
Peli Biochem Technology
818 Long Hua East Road, Greenland CBD Room 1208 Shanghai 200023 China
Charlie Yee, Manager 86-21-6345-1884
charlieyee@megapacific.com www.peli-biochem.com
University
Gulf Coast Carbon Center 10611 Exploration Way Austin, TX 78758
Angela Luciano, Project Manager 512-471-0318
angela.luciano@beg.utexas.edu gccc.beg.utexas.edu/research/ txla-cmc
Screw Conveyor Corporation
700 Hoffman Street Hammond, IN 46327
Matthew Baran, Director of Sales & Business Development 219-931-1450 sales@screwconveyor.com www.screwconveyor.com
Transportation
Boss Railcar Movers
4116 Dr. Greaves Road #1138 Grandview, MO 64030
Chris Reed, Sales Manager 816-378-0001 sales@bossrcm.com bossrcm.com
Calbrandt Inc. PO Box 198
768 Seventh Street South Delano, MN 55328
Eric Kramin, President 763-972-8888 calbrandt@calbrandt.com calbrandt.com
Calbrandt Inc. PO Box 198
768 Seventh Street South Delano, MN 55328
Heidi Goldbeck, Marketing 763-972-8888 calbrandt@calbrandt.com www.calbrandt.com
Westmor Industries 3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jon Krueger, Sales Manager 320-589-2100
info@westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
AABB Inc.
3700 West Sam Houston Parkway South Houston, TX 77042
Teri Lesniak, Marketing Communications Manager 440-585-8751 teri.lesniak@us.abb.com www.abb.com
Abhirutu Consultants
27/28 Himali Society
Pune, Maharashtra 411004 India
Sanjay Jagtap, Founder/Director 91-9822394170 abhirutu@gmail.com
ABP Engineering
440 Regency Parkway Drive Suite 200 Omaha, NE 68114
David Miller, Vice President of Operations 402-502-4242 dmiller@abpengineeringllc.com www.abpengineeringllc.com
Advanced BioFuels
507 North Bentz Street Frederick, MD 21701
Joanne Ivancic, Executive Director 301-644-1395 info@advancedbiofuels.org advancedbiofuels.info
Advanced Cryogenics, Ltd. PO Box 419 Tavernier, FL 33070
Sam A. Rushing, President 305-852-2597 rushing@terranova.net www.carbondioxideconsultants.com
Advanced Resources
International, Inc. 1840 Mackenzie Drive, Suite 100 Columbus, OH 43220
Andrew Duguid, Vice President 703-528-8420 info@adv-res.com www.adv-res.com
AFRY
Frosundaleden 2A Solna, Stockholm 16975
Sweden
Marika Hahtala, Head of Business Development, Marketing & Communications 35-81-033-11
marika.hahtala@afry.com www.afry.com
AGC Chemicals Americas, Inc.
55 East Uwchlan Avenue, Suite 201
Exton, PA 19341
Kristin Carlin, Marketing Manager 610-423-4335
kristin.carlin@agc.com www.agcchem.com
AgCountry Farm Credit Services
PO Box 6020
1900 44th Street South Fargo, ND 58108
Jessica Bernstien, Vice President 701-499-2633
jess.bernstien@agcountry.com www.agcountry.com
Air Dimensions Inc. (An Ingersoll Rand Company) 1371 West Newport Center Drive Suite 101
Deerfield Beach, FL 33442
Christopher C. Williamson, Global Sales Manager 954-420-2218 cw@airdimensions.com www.airdimensions.com/en
Alaqua, Inc.
7004 Boulevard East, Suite 28A Guttenberg, NJ 07093
Vital Strumza, President 551-482-7568 alaqua@mindspring.com www.alaquainc.com
Alternative Fuels & Chemicals Coalition
1200 G Street Northwest, Suite 800 Washington, DC 20005
Dr. Ring Singh, Executive Vice President 202-922-0144 summer@altfuelchem.org www.altfuelchem.org
American BioCarbon, LLC 32525 Hwy 1 South White Castle, LA 70788 603-319-4485 info@americanbiocarbon.com americanbiocarbon.com
American Carbon Alliance 4020 121st Street Urbandale, IA 50323
Tom Buis, CEO 515-423-0694 tbuis@americancarbonalliance.org americancarbonalliance.org
American Coalition for Ethanol
5000 South Broadband Lane Suite 224 Sioux Falls, SD 57108
Katie Muckenhirn, Vice President of Public Affairs 605-306-6107 kmuckenhirn@ethanol.org ethanol.org
American Wood Fibers, Inc. 9740 Patuxent Woods Drive Suite 500 Columbia, MD 21046
Mike Pisczor, National Sales Manager 715-359-1336 mpisczor@awf.com www.awf.com
AMETEK Process Instruments 150 Freeport Road Pittsburgh, PA 15238 Customer Service 412-828-9040 sales.ametekpi@ametek.com www.ametekpi.com
Amros Corporation 14006 Drakewood Drive Sugar Land, TX 77498
Vladimir G. Ingerman, Founder & CEO 281-240-0881 ingerman@amros.us amros.us
Anguil Environmental Systems 8855 North 55th Street Milwaukee, WI 53223
Hannah Pardee, Marketing Coordinator 414-365-6400 hannahp@anguil.com www.anguil.com
ArborGen Inc.
408 Brighton Park Boulevard Suite 101 Summerville, SC 29486
JoAnna Brown, Marketing & Communications Manager 888-888-7158 info@arborgen.com www.arborgen.com/forest-carbonsequestration-afforestation
ARTi 2151 Dean Avenue Des Moines, IA 50317
Sales Team 515-495-5101
arti@arti.com
Renato Valverde, Carbon Analyst 515-495-5101 renato.valverde@arti.com Bernardo del Campo, CEO 515-495-5101 bernardo.delcampo@arti.com www.arti.com
Assured Automation 263 Cox Street Roselle, NJ 07203
Kim ONeill, Marketing Administrator 800-899-0553 kimo@aa-fs.com assuredautomation.com
A.T. Kearney
227 West Monroe Street Chicago, IL 60606
Neal Walters, Partner 416-389-7266
lorinda.chang@kearney.com kearney.com
Atlas Copco Gas and Process 46 School Road
Voorheesville, NY 12186
Todd Gibbs, Product Marketing Manager todd.gibbs@atlascopco.com
Onur Serin, Market Manager for Emerging Markets-CCUS onur.serin@atlascopco.com www.atlascopco.com/enus/compressors/products/ processairgasequipment
Auris BioEnergy Inc.
75 State Street, Suite 100 Boston, MA 02109
Irshad Ahmed, President & CEO 617-955-0020 info@aurisbioenergy.com aurisbioenergy.com
Azura Associates International Inc.
22 King Street South, Suite 300 Waterloo, ON N2J 1N8 Canada
David Ellis, President & CEO 877-298-7288 info@azuraassociates.com azuraassociates.com
BBarnhart Crane & Rigging 3604 West Hovland Drive Sioux Falls, SD 57107
Bill Vyhlidal, Business Development 712-522-0029
bvyhlidal@barnhartcrane.com www.barnhartcrane.com
Benz Technology International, Inc.
2305 Clarksville Road Clarksville, OH 45113
Gregory Thomas Benz, President 937-289-4504
g.benz@benz-tech.com www.benz-tech.com
Beta Analytic
4985 Southwest 74th Court Miami, FL 33155
Beta Customer Care 305-662-7760 info@betalabservices.com www.betalabservices.com
BETE Fog Nozzle, LLC
50 Greenfield Street Greenfield , MA 01301 Customer Service 413-772-0846 sales@bete.com bete.com
Biodiesel Magazine
308 2nd Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biodieselmagazine.com
Biomass Controls PBC
30A Crabtree Lane Woodstock, CT 06281
Jeff Hallowell, Founder 860-315-5735 jeff@biomasscontrols.com biomasscontrols.com
Biomass Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com
Biotech Applied Research
1535 FL-64, Suite 101 Avon Park, FL 33825
Zack Farr, COO 863-443-7283 z.farr@biotechappliedresearch.org biotechappliedresearch.org
BKV Corporation
1200 17th Street, Suite 2100 Denver, CO 80202 720-375-9680 info@bkvcorp.com www.bkv.com
Boss Railcar Movers
4116 Dr. Greaves Road #1138 Grandview, MO 64030
Chris Reed, Sales Manager 816-378-0001 sales@bossrcm.com bossrcm.com
Brentwood Industries, Inc.
500 Spring Ridge Drive Reading, PA 19610
Jason Hill, Marketing Specialist 610-347-8979
jason.hill@brentwoodindustries.com www.brentwoodindustries.com/ products/mass-transfer
Bruks Siwertell
5975 Shiloh Road, Suite 109 Alpharetta, GA 30005
Joanne Turnell, Sales Representative 905-519-8631
joanne.turnell@bruks-siwertell.com bruks-siwertell.com
Burns & McDonnell 9400 Ward Parkway Kansas City, MO 64114
Ben Voran, Energy Business Partner 913-909-1835 bdvoran@burnsmcd.com burnsmcd.com/ccmagazine
CCalbrandt Inc.
PO Box 198
768 Seventh Street South Delano, MN 55328
Eric Kramin, President 763-972-8888 calbrandt@calbrandt.com calbrandt.com
Calbrandt Inc. PO Box 198
768 Seventh Street South Delano, MN 55328
Heidi Goldbeck, Marketing 763-972-8888
calbrandt@calbrandt.com www.calbrandt.com
Cambridge Pro Fab Inc. 84 Shaver Street
Brantford, ON N3S 0H4
Canada
Jim Hodgins, Sales 519-998-5613
jhodgins@cambridgeprofab.com www.cambridgeprofab.com
Canadian Wood Waste Recycling Business Group. (CWWR) #108-4301 B South Park Drive
Suite 206
Stony Plain, AB T7Z 2A9
Canada
James A. Donaldson, CEO/SME Consultant 780-239-5445
jdonaldson@ cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca cdnwoodwasterecycling.ca
CapCO2 Solutions
20-32 Linden Street Queens, NY 11385
Jeff Bonar, CEO 561-212-0451 jeff@capco2.solutions www.capco2.solutions
Carbolite Gero
11 Penns Trail, Suite 300 Newtown, PA 18940
Michael Sheairs, Digital Marketing Specialist 267-757-0351 info@verder-scientific.com www.carbolite-gero.com
Carbon Capture Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 29
Carbon Capture & Storage Jobs
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturemagazine.com/jobs
Carbon Capture & Storage Summit
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com carboncapturestoragesummit.com SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 24
Carbon Storage Solutions
31375 Great Western Drive Windsor, CO 80550
Dan Sanders, CEO/President 970-674-2910 drsanders@frontrangeenergy.com
Centrisys/CNP 9586 58th Place Kenosha, WI 53144
Jessie Jones, Marketing Associate 262-654-6006 jessiej@centrisys.us www.centrisys-cnp.com
CFO Systems LLC
10832 Old Mill Road, Suite 2 Omaha, NE 68154
Chris Payne, Director of Marketing & Recruitment 402-594-1600 cpayne@cfosystemsllc.com cfosystemsllc.com
Chiz Bros. Refractory & Insulation Specialists 2117 Lincoln Boulevard Elizabeth, PA 15037
Mark Rhoa, Jr., Vice President of Sales 412-384-5220 mrhoajr@chizbros.com www.chizbros.com
Christianson CPA & Consultants
302 Southwest Fifth Street Willmar, MN 56201
Jamey Cline, Partner 573-680-6499
jcline@christiansoncpa.com www.christiansoncpa.com
CO2SeQure
10777 Westheimer Street, Suite 250 Houston, TX 77042
Stephen Chelette, Vice President of Carbon 281-744-1343 schelette@microseismic.com www.microseismic.com
Commodity Talent LLC
149 Terhune Road Princeton, NJ 08540
George Stein, Managing Director 917-545-9850 ghstein@commoditytalent.com www.commoditytalent.com
Cooling Technology Institute (CTI) PO Box 681807 Houston, TX 77268
Jalene Fritz, Membership Committee 970-593-2434 jalenemf@gmail.com cti.org
DD3MAX, LLC
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Mark Yancey, CTO 701-746-8385 myancey@d3maxllc.com www.d3maxllc.com
Delta CleanTech Inc. #500 550 Sixth Avenue Southwest Calgary, AB T2P 0S2
Canada
Semhar Amine Zeremariam, Project Coordinator 306-359-2905
semhar.amine@deltacleantech.com deltacleantech.com
Diamond Scientific 625 Peachtree Street Cocoa, FL 32922
Eric Provost, Marketing Manager 321-223-7500 eric@diamondsci.com diamondsci.com
Digester Doc
7835 West Mossy Cup Street Boise, ID 83709
Cindy Webster, Client Relations Specialist 208-278-2651 cindy@digesterdoc.com www.digesterdoc.com
DigiKerma
13800 Coppermine Road, Suite 115 Herndon, VA 20171
Irfan K. Ali, Founder & CEO 703-234-5562 info@digikerma.com carbonkerma.com
Dimensional Energy
95 Brown Road M/S 1033
Ithaca, NY 14850
Siobhan Foley, Vice President of Product info@dimensionalenergy.com dimensionalenergy.com
Direct Companies
2320 West 54th Street North Sioux Falls, SD 57106
Kyle Davis, Marketing Associate 605-864-8472
kyle.davis@directcompanies.com directcompanies.com
EElectrochaea
Semmelweisstrasse 3 Planegg-Steinkirchen 82152 Germany 49-89-3249-3670 info@electrochaea.com electrochaea.com
Endress+Hauser 2350 Endress Place Greenwood, IN 46143
Mike Powell, Digital Marketing 317-617-2704 mike.powell@endress.com www.us.endress.com
ENERGYchange.com PO Box 24017
Guelph, ON N1E 6V8 Canada
James Roszel, Administrator 519-767-2913 webmaster@energychange.com www.energychange.com
Enerquip Thermal Solutions 611 North Road Medford, WI 54451
Troy Weik, Sales & Channel Manager 833-516-6888 sales@enerquip.com www.enerquip.com
Epcon Industrial Systems LP
PO Box 7060 (17777 Interstate 45 South Conroe, TX 77385)
The Woodlands, TX 77387
Angie Anderson, Sales/Marketing 936-202-1227 angie@epconlp.com epconlp.com
Ethanol Producer Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.ethanolproducer.com
SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 29
Evergreen Engineering®, Inc.
1740 Willow Creek Circle Eugene, OR 97402
Aaron Edewards, Business Development Director 541-484-4771
aedewards@eeeug.com evergreenengineering.com
FFagen, Inc.
501 West Hwy 212 Granite Falls, MN 56241
William Stark, Vice President of Business Development 507-829-7051
wstark@fageninc.com www.fageninc.com
Fagus GreCon Inc.
648 Griffith Road, Suite A Charlotte, NC 28217
Eric Peterson, CEO 704-315-2736
epeterson@grecon.us www.fagus-grecon.com/en/ fire-prevention
Flowserve
5215 North O’Connor Blvd, Suite 700 Irving, TX 75039
Cheryl Moreland, Manager of Emerging Technologies Business Development 508-530-1520
cmoreland@flowserve.com
Marco Giambitto, Manager of Emerging Technologies Business Development 393-409-385477
mgiambitto@flowserve.com www.flowserve.com/en
Forest Concepts, LLC 3320 West Valley Hwy North Suite D110 Auburn, WA 98001
Mike Perry, CEO 253-333-9663
mperry@forestconcepts.com www.forestconcepts.com
GGECA Environnement
1516 chemin du Club Nautique Lac Sergent, QC G0A 2J0 Canada
Suzanne Allaire, CEO 418-558-4762
suzanne.allaire@gecaenviro.com gecaenviro.com
Geostock Sandia
10930 West Sam Houston Parkway North, Suite 100 Houston, TX 77064
Sylvain Riba, President & CEO 346-314-4347
sylvain.riba@geostocksandia.com www.geostocksandia.com
GIC Trade PO Box 151590 Chevy Chase, MD 20825
Richard Gilmore, President/CEO 301-799-0840
rickgilmore@gicgroup.com www.gicgroup.com
Global Talent Solutions PO Box 235 Frazee, MN 56544
Brian Bigger, President/Recruiter 218-206-6659
brian@globaltalentsolutions.com globaltalentsolutions.com
Good Land Industrial LLC 16800 West Greenfield Avenue Brookfield, WI 53005
Jim Tassone, Owner 414-349-6664
jimt@goodlandind.com goodlandind.com
Graves & Co.
1800 West Loop South, Suite 750 Houston, TX 77027
John Graves, President 713-650-0811
jgraves@graves-co.com graves-co.com
Graves & Co. Consulting
1800 West Loop South #750 Houston, TX 77027
John L. Graves, President 713-650-0811
jgraves@gravesconsulting.us gravesconsulting.us
Greenedge
1876 23rd Street Southeast Bemidji, MN 56601
Aaron Poxleitner, Project Manager 218-556-0810
aaronp@greenedgeco.com
Jason LaValley, CEO 218-444-3030
jasonl@lavalleyindustries.com greenedgeco.com
Gregersen Structural Engineering, Inc. 175 Blackfoot Street Mesquite, NV 89027
Max A. Gregersen, Principal Structural-Seismic Engineer 385-232-1747
max@gsestructural.com www.gsestructural.com
Gulf Coast Carbon Center 10611 Exploration Way Austin, TX 78758
Angela Luciano, Project Manager 512-471-0318
angela.luciano@beg.utexas.edu gccc.beg.utexas.edu/research/ txla-cmc
HHaffner Energy Inc.
Greentown Labs 4200 San Jacinto Street Houston, TX 77004
Nathalie Ionesco, COO 713-297-1406
nathalie.ionesco@haffner-energy. com www.haffner-energy.com
Halliburton
3000 North Sam Houston Pkwy East Houston, TX 77032
Mari Pillar, Sr. Marketing Manager of Low Carbon Solutions 281-871-6953
mari.pillar@halliburton.com www.halliburton.com/LCS
Halliburton
3000 N Sam Houston Pkwy E Houston, TX 77032
Rob Fleming, CCUS Segment Lead –
North America Land 281-851-4430
robert.fleming@halliburton.com www.Halliburton.com/LCS
Hall Trask Equipment Co.
105 Rocsam Park Road Braintree, MA 02184
Mike Amaral, Operations Manager 781-380-8700
mamaral@hall-trask.com traskpetroleumequipment.com
Helle Engineering LLC
3102 Cedar Valley Court League City, TX 77573
Matthew Helle, CEO 409-502-1797
mhelle@helleengineering.com helleengineering.com
HEMCO Corporation
711 South Powell Road Independence, MO 64056
Jerry G. Schwarz, Marketing 816-8796-2900
jerry.schwarz@hemcocorp.com hemcocorp.com
HengYe ® Inc.
11999 Katy Fwy, Suite 588 Houston, TX 77079
Mark Binns, Technical Business Director 502-232-5356
mark@hengyeinc.com hengyeinc.com
Hetiman Architects
555 West Pierce Road, Suite 130 Itasca, IL 60143
Paul Heiman, Director 630-773-3551
pheitman@heitmanarchitects.com www.heitmanarchitects.com
Hexas Biomass 900 Jefferson Street Southeast #1113 Olympia, WA 98501
Wendy Owens, Founder & CEO 360-890-0775 info@hexas.com www.hexas.com
Husch Blackwell 14606 Branch Street, Suite 200 Omaha, NE 68154
David Gardels, Partner 402-964-5027
david.gardels@huschblackwell.com www.huschblackwell.com
Hydro-Thermal™ Corporation
400 Pilot Court
Waukesha, WI 53188
Sales
262-548-8900
info@hydro-thermal.com www.hydro-thermal.com
IICM, Inc.
PO Box 397 310 North First Street Colwich, KS 67030
Adriana Albornoz, Director of Marketing & Communications 316-796-0900
adriana.albornoz@icminc.com icminc.com
IEP Technologies
417-1 South Street Marlborough, MA 01752
Harland Conners, Marketing Specialist 855-793-3949
harland.conners@hoerbiger.com ieptechnologies.com
Indeck Power Equipment Company 1111 Willis Avenue Wheeling, IL 60090
Customer Service 847-541-8300 info@indeck-power.com indeck.com
Industrial Sales Solutions
3684 120th Court West Faribault, MN 55021
Mike Vogel, Sales Engineer 507-649-0751
mike.vogel@ind-sales.com www.ind-sales.com
Industry Link
Sos. Stefan cel Mare 23 Bucharest, Sector 2 011736
Romania
Beatrice Ene, Managing Director 40-722-764-802
beatrice.ene@industrylink.eu industrylink.eu
INTEC Engineering GmbH
John-Deere-Str. 43 Bruchsal, Baden-Wuerttemberg D-76646
Germany
Christian Daniel, Key Account Manager
49-0-7251-93243-12 info@intec-energy.de www.intec-energy.de
INTEREP Inc.
PO Box 123 Golden, CO 80402
Gary Gerba, Sales Manager 412-676-7355 gary.g@interep.us interep.us
International Biomass Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.biomassconference.com SEE OUR AD ON PAGE 24
International Fuel Ethanol Workshop & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.fuelethanolworkshop.com
Iowa Renewable Fuels Association
5550 Wild Rose Lane, Suite 340 West Des Moines, IA 50266
Lisa Coffelt, Marketing Director 515-829-0478 lcoffelt@iowarfa.org www.iowarfa.org
Isomer Project Group
115 Welborn Street, Suite A Greenville, SC 29601
Tyler Smith, Director of Business Development 864-565-9100 tyler.smith@isomer.group www.isomer.group
JJenike & Johanson
400 Business Park Drive Tyngsboro, MA 01879
Sinah Watts, Marketing Manager 978-649-3300 swatts@jenike.com jenike.com
Jier Art Development LLC Shanghai China
Keren Zhou, Founder 86-15000575345 kerenzhou@jierart.com www.jierart.com
KKATZEN International, Inc.
3805 Edwards Road, Suite 500 Cincinnati, OH 45209
Robert E. Eickelberger, Vice President of Business Operations 513-351-7500
eickelberger@katzen.com www.katzen.com
Kilpatrick Townsend & Stockton LLP
701 Pennsylvania Avenue Northwest Suite 200 Washington, DC 20004
Mark Riedy, Partner-Chair-Energy Practice 202-508-5823
mriedy@ktslaw.com www.ktslaw.com
KSB 4415 Sarellen Road Henrico, VA 23231
Rene Kopp, Vice President 804-845-8156 rene.kopp@ksb.com ksb.com
Kutak Rock LLP
1650 Farnam Street Omaha, NE 68102
David Bracht, Attorney 402-981-2900 david.bracht@kutakrock.com www.kutakrock.com
LLake Superior Consulting
130 West Superior Street, Suite 500 Duluth, MN 55802
Luke Wilkens, Business Development Manager 713-516-2546
lwilkens@lsconsulting.com www.lsconsulting.com
LEC Partners, Inc.
245 First Street, Suite 1800 Cambridge, MA 02142
Jason White, CEO 617-444-8750 info@lec-exec.com lee-enterprises.com
LI-COR
4647 Superior Steet Lincoln, NE 68504
LI-COR Sales, Technical Salesperson 800-447-3576
vanessa.wamsley@licor.com www.licor.com
Life Cycle Associates
884 Portola Road, Suite A11
Portola Valley, CA 94028
Stefan Unnasch, Managing Director 650-461-9048 outreach@lifecycleassociates.com www.lifecycleassociates.com
Linde
7000 High Grove Boulevard Burr Ridge, IL 60527
Roman Grosman, Director of Business Development 630-320-4148 roman.grosman@linde.com www.lindeus.com
Liquidmetal
6207 Jim Snow Way Chattanooga, TN 37421
Jonathan Starling, Marketing Manager 423-541-3210 jstarling@lmce.solutions www.liquidmetal-coatings.com
Maas Companies Inc. PO Box 7127 Rochester, MN 55902
Tyler Maas, Director of Sales & Marketing 507-285-1444 maas@maascompanies.com www.maascompanies.com
Magnatrol Valve Corporation
67 Fifth Avenue Hawthorne, NJ 07506
David J. Calafiore, Product Manager 973-427-4341 davec@magnatrol.com www.magnatrol.com
Maryland Forestry Foundation 124 South Street Annapolis, MD 21401
Gary Allen, President 301-717-1579 gallenbay@gmail.com marylandforestryfoundation.org
McGrath North 1601 Dodge Street First National Tower, Suite 3700 Omaha, NE 68102
Steve Case, Attorney 402-341-3070
scase@mcgrathnorth.com www.mcgrathnorth.com
Mead & Hunt
6737 West Washington Street Suite 3500 Milwaukee, WI 53214
Matt Quinn, Energy Project Developer 585-216-7076
matt.quinn@meadhunt.com meadhunt.com/markets/ renewableenergy
Mercurius Biorefining 3190 Bay Road Ferndale, WA 98248
Eric Seck, Chief Operations Officer
eric@mercuriusbiorefining.com mercuriusbiorefining.com
Merjent, Inc.
1 Southeast Main Street, Suite 300 Minneapolis, MN 55414
Angie Ronayne, Chief Sustainability Officer 612-746-3669
angie.ronayne@merjent.com www.merjent.com
MicroBio Engineering Inc.
3988 Short Street #100 San Luis Obispo, CA 93401
John Benemann, CEO 925-352-3352
johnbenemann@ microbioengineering.com microbioengineering.com
Midwest Ironworks
708 Fourth Street East Horace, ND 58047
Dustin Hartman, Project Manager 320-760-7579
dustinh@midwestironworks.com www.midwestironworks.com
Modular Energy Solutions
PO Box 2759
Santa Clara, CA 95055
Charles Nolan, President 408-483-5922
chucknln@sbcglobal.net www.modular-e.com
Moore Fans
800 South Missouri Avenue Marceline, MO 64658
Spencer Ward, Factory Representative 660-376-3575
spencer.ward@moorefans.com www.moorefans.com
MRU Instruments
7902 Horseshoe Circle Humble, TX 77396
John Bickers, Vice President of Business Development 832-716-5218
jbickers@mru-instruments.com mru-instruments.com
My Source Solution, LLC
18926 Southwest 17th Court Miramar, FL 33029
Ritu Linhart, CEO/President 305-812-8288
rlinhart@mysourcesolution.com mysourcesolution.com
NNational Carbon Capture Center
31800 Hwy 25 North Wilsonville, AL 35186
info@nationalcarboncapturecenter.com nationalcarboncapturecenter.com
NESTEC, Inc.
PO Box 125 222 East Main Street
Pen Argyl, PA 18072
Scott Brayton, Director of Sales 248-794-3701
sbrayton@nestecinc.com www.nestecinc.com
Netherland, Sewell & Associates, Inc.
2100 Ross Avenue, Suite 2200 Dallas, TX 75201
Joe Mello, Vice President & Team Leader
713-654-4950
jmello@nsai-petro.com netherlandsewell.com
NETZSCH Pumps
119 Pickering Way Exton, PA 19341
Robert LePera, Vice President 614-619-5550
robert.lepera@netzsch.com pumps-systems.netzsch.com/en-US
Nikua Training CenterRegistered 501 (c) Non-Profit Organization 2397 Northwest Kings Blvd #174 Corvallis, OR 97330
Daniel Shafer, CEO & Co-Director 541-224-6189 operations@nikua.org www.nikua.org
Nitto Denko
101 Metro Drive #700 San Jose, CA 95110
Marcel Benz, Director of Business Development 760-277-7605 marcel.benz@nitto.com www.nitto.com/us/en/products/ etechnology
No Limite Exteriors 2369 20th Avenue Southeast Medicine Hat, AB T1A 3Y2 Canada
Adam Rudolph, Director 403-952-2484
nolimit@nolimitexteriors.com nolimitexteriors.com
North American SAF Conference & Expo
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.safconference.com
North Dakota Ethanol Producers Association 1605 East Capitol Avenue Bismarck, ND 58502
Laura Lacher, Executive Director 701-355-4458
llacher@clearwatercommunications.net www.facebook.com/ NorthDakotaEthanol
Northern Crops Institute 1300 18th Street North Fargo, ND 58102
Casey Peterson, Program Development Manager 701-231-4250 casey.peterson@ndsu.edu www.northern-crops.com
Nuada 18A Newforge Lane Belfast, Northern Ireland BT95PX United Kingdom Stratos Stavrakakis, Business Development Manager 447-8-026-26-345 e.stavrakakis@nuadaco2.com nuadaco2.com
OOlson Search
International, Inc. PO Box 3468 Boulder, CO 80307
Jon Olson, President 800-985-5191 jon@olsonsearch.com olsonsearch.com
ONYM Group 3500 Broadway Avenue Montreal East, QC H1B 5B4 Canada
Mustapha Ouyed, Executive Vice President 514-895-9592 mustapha.ouyed@groupeonym.com groupeonym.com
Optical Scientific 2 Metropolitan Court, Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
James William Shinkle, Business Development 301-963-3630 jwshinkle@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
Optical Scientific Inc.
2 Metropolitan Court, Suite 6 Gaithersburg, MD 20878
Donn Williams, Vice President of Sales & Marketing
301-524-1430
donnw@opticalscientific.com www.opticalscientific.com
PPeli Biochem Technology
818 Long Hua East Road, Greenland CBD Room 1208 Shanghai 200023
China
Charlie Yee, Manager 86-21-6345-1884 charlieyee@megapacific.com www.peli-biochem.com
Pelican Energy Consultants
4099 Hwy 190 East Service Road Covington, LA 70433
Ed Covington, Vice President of Strategy & Markets 985-871-4200 ed.covington@pelicanenergy.com pelicanenergy.com
Pellet Mill Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203 Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com biomassmagazine.com/magazine
Permanente Corporation
4265 San Felipe Street, Suite 1100 Houston, TX 77027
Marc A. Seidner, President 310-569-6500
marc@permanentecorp.com
Daniel J. Seidner, Executive Vice President & CTO 310-433-4200 daniel@permanentecorp.com www.permanentecorp.com
Pinion
8801 Renner Boulevard, Suite 100 Lenexa, KS 66219
Kristin Chiera, Marketing Director 463-209-7650
kristin.chiera@pinionglobal.com www.pinionglobal.com
Plaas Incorporated
1427 Old West Main Street Red Wing, MN 55066
Taite Plaas, President 651-388-8881
taite@plaasinc.com www.plaasinc.com
Pond & Company
3500 Parkway Lane, Suite 500
Peachtree Corners, GA 30092
Ron Pagel, Sr. Client Manager 920-841-3286
ron.pagel@pondco.com www.pondco.com
Precision Combustion, Inc.
410 Sackett Point Road
North Haven, CT 06473
Stewart Rosenberg, Business Development Leader 203 287-3700
srosenberg@precision-combustion.com pci.energy
Progressive Energy LLC
111 Veterans Memorial Boulevard Suite 1546
Metairie, LA 70005
Nick Cioll, CEO 469-951-3264 ncioll@totalgen.com
ProSim, Inc.
325 Chestnut Street, Suite 800 Philadelphia, PA 19106
Gabriel Turzo, Sales Director 215-600-3759
fives-prosim.sales@fivesgroup.com www.fives-prosim.com
RR.C. Costello & Assoc., Inc.
1611 South Pacific Coast Hwy Suite 302
Redondo Beach, CA 90277
Rocky Costello, President 310-792-5870
crosenthal@rccostello.com www.rccostello.com
Reiter
599 Colonial Drive Grand Junction, CO 81507
Kristof Reiter, CEO 888-428-5617
kristof@reiterscientific.com reiter.com
Renewable Energy Institute
6705 Bancroft Woods Austin, TX 78729
Monty Goodell, Executive Director 832-758-0027
info@carboncapturesequestration.com carboncaptureandsequestration.com
ResourceWise
15720 Brixham Hill Avenue, Suite 550 Charlotte, NC 28211
Angela Rockwell, Director of Marketing 803-269-7441
angela.rockwell@resourcewise.com resourcewise.com
RTP Environmental Associates, Inc.
400 Post Avenue, Suite 405 Westbury, NY 11590
Jessica Karras-Bailey, Principal 516-333-4526 bailey@rtpenv.com www.rtpenv.com
SSAF Magazine
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com safmagazine.com
SAFPath
New York, NY
Sara Fletcher, Director info@safpath.com safpath.com
Salof Limited Inc.
IH 5141 IH 35 South New Braunfels, TX 78132
Bob Luhrs, President 830-225-1744 sales@salofltd.com www.salofltd.com
Saola Energy
200 West Douglas Avenue, Suite 230 Wichita, KS 67202
Ben Root, Manager 316-413-3345 broot@saolaenergy.com www.saolaenergy.com
Saulsbury Industries
2951 East Interstate 20 Odessa, TX 79766
Savanah Cantleberry, Manager of Marketing & Communications 432-366-3686 mlongshaw@saulsbury.com www.saulsbury.com
Screw Conveyor Corporation
700 Hoffman Street Hammond, IN 46327
Matthew Baran, Director of Sales & Business Development 219-931-1450 sales@screwconveyor.com www.screwconveyor.com
Select Domains
PO Box 4068 Naples, ME 04055
Robert Fogg, Owner 207-650-9494
robertfogg@q-team.com www.facebook.com/profile. php?id=61557242306370
Smart Strategies LLC
236 East 81st Street, Floor 2 New York, NY 10028
Nelson Garcez, CEO 646-594-5399
nelson.garcez@smartstrat.com www.smartstrat.com
Solar-Carbon Solutions 13700 Fifth Avenue North Minneapolis, MN 55441
Andrew Leonard, Founder/Owner 612-232-2028 drew@solar-carbon.com solar-carbon.com
Southeast Capital & Finance, LLC PO Box 581 2301 Dodge Street Searcy, AR 72145
Jay Barber, President & CEO 501-246-8675 jay@southeastcapital.net southeastcapital.net
Southeastern Construction 1150 Pebbledale Road Mulberry, FL 33860
James Green, Business Development Manager 863-428-1511 jamesg@secm.co www.southeasternconst.com
Strobel Companies 106 South Green Street Clarks, NE 68628
Larry Myers, Client Development 308-624-4999 lmyers@strobelenergy.com strobelenergy.com
Sukup Manufacturing Co. 1555 255th Street Sheffield, IA 50475
Brent Hansen, Commercial Accounts Manager 641-892-8105 bhansen@sukup.com www.sukup.com
Sulzer
900 Threadneedle Street, Suite 700 Houston, TX 77079
Sebastian Arango, Carbon Capture Sales & Applications Manager 832-589-4843
sebastian.arango@sulzer.com www.sulzer.com
Summit Lubrication 9010 County Road 2120 Tyler, TX 75707
Joshua Ware, Market Manager of Gas Compressors 903-579-9223 joshua.ware@klueber.com www.klsummit.com/en
Sustainable Fuels Summit: SAF, Renewable Diesel & Biodiesel
308 Second Avenue North, Suite 304 Grand Forks, ND 58203
Customer Service 701-746-8385 service@bbiinternational.com www.sustainablefuelssummit.com
SW Firefighting Foam & Equipment, LLC
25A Lone Pine Ridge Santa Fe, NM 87505
Casey Ryan, Manager 505-699-5068
cryan@swfirefightingfoam.com novacool.com
Syntek Resource Corporation
2143 18th Avenue Court Greeley, CO 80631
Sandra Robnett, CHM/CEO 970-356-9004 srobnett@gmail.com www.interasset.org
TTank Connection
3609 North 16th Street Parsons, KS 67357
Jeremy Burke, Director of Sales/ Business Development 620-423-3010
sales@tankconnection.com www.tankconnection.com
Tenaska, Inc. 14302 FNB Parkway Omaha, NE 68154
Manuel Herraiz, Director of Business Development 402-758-6223 mherraiz@tenaska.com www.tenaska.com
The New York Blower Company
7660 South Quincy Street Willowbrook, IL 60527
Ben Zastrow, Director of Marketing 630-794-5731
bzastrow@nyb.com www.nyb.com
Todd & Sargent, Inc.
2905 Southeast Fifth Street Ames, IA 50010
Scott Sylvester, Vice President 515-956-4805
ssylvester@tsargent.com www.tsargent.com
Toshiba America Energy Systems
6623 West Washington Street West Allis, WI 53214
Laura Baumann, Director of Marketing 716-799-1080
laura.baumann@toshiba.com www.toshiba.com/taes
TRC Environmental Corp.
207C Eisenhower Lane South Lombard, IL 60148
Daniel F. Grabowski, Project Director 312-533-2024
dgrabowski@trccompanies.com www.trccompanies.com
Trihydro Corporation
1252 Commerce Drive
Laramie, WY 82070
Carly Sowecke, Project Geologist/ Hydrogeologist 307-460-0831
csowecke@trihydro.com www.trihydro.com
TTUS Inc.
1457 Ammons Street, Suite 107 Lakewood, CO 80214
Binh Le, General Manager 402-805-2968
binh.le@ttusinc.com ttusinc.com
Tubacero
Vicente Guerrero 3729 Nte. Monterrey, NL 64500 Mexico
Arturo Marquez, Export Manager 52-81-8305-5536
amarquez@tubacero.com www.tubacero.com
UUzelac Industries Inc.
6901 Industrial Loop Greendale, WI 53129
Mia Ivetic, Marketing Manager 414-529-0240 mia@uzelacind.com uzelacind.com
VVaisala Inc.
3 Van De Graff Drive, Suite 140 Burlington, MA 01803
Justin Walsh, Business Development 781-537-1071
justin.walsh@vaisala.com www.vaisala.com/en/industriesapplications/ccus-carbon-captureutilization-storage
Valin Corporation 5225 Hellyer Avenue, Suite 250 San Jose, CA 95138
Dave Molinari, Technical Sales Engineer 800-774-5630 dkapsch@valin.com www.valin.com
Valuation and Assets Services, LLC 2108 Carroll Creek View Frederick, MD 21702
K. Boison, Principal 301-646-4119 projects@valuationandassets.com www.valuationandassets.com
Verico Technology 230 Shaker Road Enfield, CT 06082
Brian Pahl, Sales Director 860-871-1200 bpahl@vericotechnology.com www.vericocontractcoating.com
Vista Projects
330-4000 Fourth Street Southeast Calgary, AB T2G 2W3 Canada
Leslie Cassidy, Business Development 403-255-3455
leslie.cassidy@vistaprojects.com www.vistaprojects.com
WWanner Engineering 1204 Chestnut Avenue Minneapolis, MN 55403
Brian Rock, Marketing & Technical Publications 612-313-7872 brock@wannereng.com www.hydra-cell.com
Westmor Industries
3 Development Drive Morris, MN 56267
Jon Krueger, Sales Manager 320-589-2100 info@westmor-ind.com westmor-ind.com
YYilkins PO Box 8210 Groningen 9728XA
The Netherlands
Maikel van Loo, Controller 3185-007-0553
m.vanloo@yilkins.com yilkins.com
September 22-24, 2025 Minneapolis Convention Center Minneapolis, MN
SAF Magazine, in collaboration with the Commercial Aviation Alternative Fuels Initiative (CAAFI) will showcase the latest strategies for aviation fuel decarbonization, solutions for key industry challenges, and highlight the current opportunities for airlines, corporations and fuel producers.
The North American SAF Conference & Expo is designed to promote the development and adoption of practical solutions to produce SAF and decarbonize the aviation sector. Exhibitors will connect with attendees and showcase the latest technologies and services currently offered within the industry.